The mechanism of interaction between focused ultrasound and microbubbles in blood-brain barrier opening in mice.
Authors: Tung YS, Vlachos F, Feshitan JA, Borden MA, Konofagou EE
The activation of bubbles by an acoustic field has been shown to temporarily open the blood-brain barrier (BBB), but the trigger cause responsible for the physiological effects involved in the process of BBB opening remains unknown. Here, the trigger cause (i.e., physical mechanism) of the focused ultrasound-induced BBB opening with monodispersed microbubbles is identified. Sixty-seven mice were injected intravenously with bubbles of 1-2, 4-5, or 6-8 μm in diameter and the concentration of 10(7) numbers/ml. The right hippocampus of each mouse was then sonicated using focused ultrasound (1.5 MHz frequency, 100 cycles pulse length, 10 Hz pulse repetition frequency, 1 min duration). Peak-rarefactional pressures of 0.15, 0.30, 0.45, or 0.60 MPa were applied to identify the threshold of BBB opening and inertial cavitation (IC). Our results suggest that the BBB opens with nonlinear bubble oscillation when the bubble diameter is similar to the capillary diameter and with inertial cavitation when it is not. The bubble may thus have to be in contact with the capillary wall to induce BBB opening without IC. BBB opening was shown capable of being induced safely with nonlinear bubble oscillation at the pressure threshold and its volume was highly dependent on both the acoustic pressure and bubble diameter.
Introduction
Purpose
Drug delivery with BBB opening
Study Objective
To identify the physical mechanism by which focused ultrasound combined with monodispersed microbubbles induces opening of the blood–brain barrier.
Animal model / Human subject
Mouse; C57BL/6; age not reported; sex not reported
Disease model
Healthy
MRI or image guidance method
vertical-bore MRI (9.4T) (Bruker Biospin, Billerica, MA)
Targeted brain region(s)
Hippocampus
Target coordinates
3 mm beneath the skull
Outcomes and Safety
Summary of Outcomes
Focused ultrasound with intravenously injected monodispersed microbubbles produced transient blood–brain barrier opening in mouse hippocampus; opening occurred via nonlinear (stable) bubble oscillation when bubble diameter matched capillary size and via inertial cavitation when it did not. The effective ultrasound parameters were 1.5 MHz frequency, 100-cycle pulses, 10 Hz pulse repetition, 1 min sonication, and peak-rarefactional pressures tested at 0.15, 0.30, 0.45 and 0.60 MPa, with BBB opening achieved at the pressure thresholds producing nonlinear oscillation (lower pressures) and at higher pressures producing inertial cavitation; opening volume depended on acoustic pressure and bubble diameter.
Safety-related matter
BBB opening was shown to be induced safely with nonlinear bubble oscillation at the pressure threshold; no adverse effects were reported.
Brain Region
Ultrasound Parameters
Ultrasound instrument
Single-element, circular FUS transducer with Single-element pulse-echo transducer
FUS Frequency
1.5 MHz; 8–17 MHz (imaging probe, center 12 MHz)
FUS Pressure
0.15, 0.30, 0.45, 0.60 MPa
FUS Mode
pulsed
Pulse duration
0.0667 ms
Duration of a single FUS session
1 min
Focal Characteristics
Focal depth: 60 mm; Focal length: 60 mm; Aperture size: None
Treatment frequency
Single
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