Image-Guided Focused Ultrasound-Mediated Regional Brain Stimulation in Sheep.
Authors: Lee W, Lee SD, Park MY, Foley L, Purcell-Estabrook E, Kim H, Fischer K, Maeng LS, Yoo SS
Non-invasive brain stimulation using focused ultrasound has largely been carried out in small animals. In the present study, we applied stimulatory focused ultrasound transcranially to the primary sensorimotor (SM1) and visual (V1) brain areas in sheep (Dorset, all female, n = 8), under the guidance of magnetic resonance imaging, and examined the electrophysiologic responses. By use of a 250-kHz focused ultrasound transducer, the area was sonicated in pulsed mode (tone-burst duration of 1 ms, duty cycle of 50%) for 300 ms. The acoustic intensity at the focal target was varied up to a spatial peak pulse-average intensity (Isppa) of 14.3 W/cm(2). Sonication of SM1 elicited electromyographic responses from the contralateral hind leg, whereas stimulation of V1 generated electroencephalographic potentials. These responses were detected only above a certain acoustic intensity, and the threshold intensity, as well as the degree of responses, varied among sheep. Post-sonication animal behavior was normal, but minor microhemorrhages were observed from the V1 areas exposed to highly repetitive sonication (every second for ≥500 times for electroencephalographic measurements, Isppa = 6.6-10.5 W/cm(2), mechanical index = 0.9-1.2). Our results suggest the potential translational utility of focused ultrasound as a new brain stimulation modality, yet also call for caution in the use of an excessive number of sonications.
Introduction
Purpose
Transcranial ultrasound stimulation
Study Objective
To evaluate the feasibility and effects of image-guided focused ultrasound for targeted regional brain stimulation in sheep.
Animal model / Human subject
Sheep (Ovis aries), strain not reported, age not reported, sex not reported
Disease model
Healthy
Outcomes and Safety
Summary of Outcomes
The supplied text contains only the article title and no experimental results, so no biological or behavioral effects can be determined and no focused ultrasound parameters or successful settings are reported.
Safety-related matter
No safety or adverse effects are mentioned in the provided text; only the paper title was given.
Brain Region
Ultrasound Parameters
Focal Characteristics
Focal depth: None; Focal length: None; Aperture size: None
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