Microbubble-Enhanced Heating: Exploring the Effect of Microbubble Concentration and Pressure Amplitude on High-Intensity Focused Ultrasound Treatments.
Authors: Clark A, Bonilla S, Suo D, Shapira Y, Averkiou M
High-intensity focused ultrasound (HIFU) is a non-invasive tool that can be used for targeted thermal ablation treatments. Currently, HIFU is clinically approved for treatment of uterine fibroids, various cancers, and certain brain applications. However, for brain applications such as essential tremors, HIFU can only be used to treat limited areas confined to the center of the brain because of geometrical limitations (shape of the transducer and skull). A major obstacle to advancing this technology is the inability to treat non-central brain locations without causing damage to the skin and/or skull. Previous research has indicated that cavitation-induced bubbles or microbubble contrast agents can be used to enhance HIFU treatments by increasing ablation regions and shortening acoustic exposures at lower acoustic pressures. However, little research has been done to explore the interplay between microbubble concentration and pressure amplitude on HIFU treatments. We developed an in vitro experimental setup to study lesion formation at three different acoustic pressures and three microbubble concentrations. Real-time ultrasound imaging was integrated to monitor initial microbubble concentration and subsequent behavior during the HIFU treatments. Depending on the pressure used for the HIFU treatment, there was an optimal concentration of microbubbles that led to enhanced heating in the focal area. If the concentration of microbubbles was too high, the treatment was detrimentally affected because of non-linear attenuation by the pre-focal microbubbles. Additionally, the real-time ultrasound imaging provided a reliable method to monitor microbubble activity during the HIFU treatments, which is important for translation to in vivo HIFU applications with microbubbles.
Introduction
Purpose
Thermal ablation
Study Objective
To determine how varying microbubble concentrations and HIFU acoustic pressures interact to influence lesion formation and heating using an in-vitro setup with real-time ultrasound monitoring.
MRI or image guidance method
Real-time ultrasound imaging
Outcomes and Safety
Summary of Outcomes
Microbubble-enhanced HIFU increased heating at optimal microbubble concentrations for each acoustic pressure, while higher concentrations reduced efficacy due to prefocal nonlinear attenuation
Safety-related matter
The author note that treating non-central brain regions with HIFU may risk skin or skull damage and that high microbubble concentrations cause detrimental prefocal attenuation. No adverse effect
Brain Region
Ultrasound Parameters
Ultrasound instrument
Focused single element circular transducer (H-116, Sonic Concepts, Seattle, WA, USA)
FUS Frequency
0.9 MHz
FUS Pressure
0.5, 2.0, 6.0 Mpa
FUS Mode
pulsed
Pulse duration
411.1 ms
Duration of a single FUS session
30 s
Focal Characteristics
Focal depth: 62.1 mm; Focal length: None; Aperture size: None
Treatment frequency
Single
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