Chirp- and random-based coded ultrasonic excitation for localized blood-brain barrier opening.
Authors: Kamimura HA, Wang S, Wu SY, Karakatsani ME, Acosta C, Carneiro AA, Konofagou EE
Chirp- and random-based coded excitation methods have been proposed to reduce standing wave formation and improve focusing of transcranial ultrasound. However, no clear evidence has been shown to support the benefits of these ultrasonic excitation sequences in vivo. This study evaluates the chirp and periodic selection of random frequency (PSRF) coded-excitation methods for opening the blood-brain barrier (BBB) in mice. Three groups of mice (n = 15) were injected with polydisperse microbubbles and sonicated in the caudate putamen using the chirp/PSRF coded (bandwidth: 1.5–1.9 MHz, peak negative pressure: 0.52 MPa, duration: 30 s) or standard ultrasound (frequency: 1.5 MHz, pressure: 0.52 MPa, burst duration: 20 ms, duration: 5 min) sequences. T1-weighted contrast-enhanced MRI scans were performed to quantitatively analyze focused ultrasound induced BBB opening. The mean opening volumes evaluated from the MRI were mm3, mm3and mm3 for the chirp, random and regular sonications, respectively. The mean cavitation levels were V.s, V.s and V.s for the chirp, random and regular sonications, respectively. The chirp and PSRF coded pulsing sequences improved the BBB opening localization by inducing lower cavitation levels and smaller opening volumes compared to results of the regular sonication technique. Larger bandwidths were associated with more focused targeting but were limited by the frequency response of the transducer, the skull attenuation and the microbubbles optimal frequency range. The coded methods could therefore facilitate highly localized drug delivery as well as benefit other transcranial ultrasound techniques that use higher pressure levels and higher precision to induce the necessary bioeffects in a brain region while avoiding damage to the surrounding healthy tissue.
Introduction
Purpose
Drug delivery with BBB opening
Study Objective
To evaluate chirp and periodic selection of random frequency (PSRF) coded-excitation ultrasound methods for opening the blood–brain barrier in mice and compare their effects to standard ultrasound sonication.
Animal model / Human subject
Mice (species: Mus musculus); strain: C57BL/6; age: not reported; sex: male
Disease model
Healthy
Targeted brain region(s)
Caudate Putamen
Target coordinates
AP: 6 mm; ML: 2.2 mm; DV: 3 mm
Outcomes and Safety
Summary of Outcomes
Chirp and PSRF coded-excitation sequences produced smaller, more localized BBB openings with much lower cavitation levels than regular sonication (chirp: 9.38±5.71 mm3, 55.40±28.43 V·s; PSRF: 8.91±3.91 mm3, 63.87±29.97 V·s; regular: 35.47±5.10 mm3, 356.52±257.15 V·s). Successful parameters were the coded pulses (chirp/PSRF, bandwidth 1.5–1.9 MHz, peak negative pressure 0.52 MPa, duration 30 s) compared with standard sonication (1.5 MHz, 0.52 MPa, 20 ms bursts, total duration 5 min).
Safety-related matter
Chirp and PSRF coded excitations produced lower cavitation levels and smaller BBB opening volumes than regular.
Brain Region
Ultrasound Parameters
Ultrasound instrument
Therapeutic transducer (Imasonic SAS, Voray-sur-Iognon, France)
FUS Frequency
1.5-1.9 MHz (chirp/PSRF coded); 1.5 MHz (standard regular sonication)
FUS Pressure
0.52 MPa
FUS Mode
pulsed
Pulse duration
70.7 us or 20 ms
Duration of a single FUS session
30 s (chirp/PSRF coded sequence) or 5 min (standard ultrasound sequence)
Focal Characteristics
Focal depth: None; Focal length: 60 mm; Aperture size: 70 mm
Treatment frequency
single
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