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Design and experimental evaluations of a low-frequency hemispherical ultrasound phased-array system for transcranial blood-brain barrier disruption.

Authors: Liu HL, Chen HW, Kuo ZH, Huang WC

The purpose of this paper is to demonstrate a prototype design of a low-frequency multiple-channel hemispherical focused-ultrasound phased-array system for transcranial disruption of the blood-brain barrier (BBB). A 32-channel ultrasound driving system tunable in the frequency range from 200 to 400 kHz was designed for producing a suitable ultrasound output for BBB disruption. The driving system includes a microcontroller/field-programmable gate-array-based control kernel with multiple-channel driving circuits implemented by a high-voltage switching/LC-resonance/impedance-matching circuit module. Three hemispherical phased arrays comprising 22, 31, and 80 elements were fabricated and tested. The pressure distributions at the geometric center and at off-center positions were tested experimentally. The focal performance of the different hemispherical arrays was also evaluated theoretically. The results showed that the developed phased-array system can successfully drive the hemispherical array with multiple-channel ultrasound signals with independent phase control at 8-bit resolution. Good focusing abilities were evident both at the geometric center and at specific off-center target positions. Preliminary animal experiments show that the BBB in rat can be locally disrupted successfully. The system will serve as a reference platform for developing a focused-ultrasound system for clinical use in brain drug delivery applications.

Introduction

Purpose Drug delivery with BBB opening
Study Objective To design and experimentally evaluate a low-frequency hemispherical ultrasound phased-array system for transcranial blood-brain barrier disruption.
Animal model / Human subject Rat, Sprague Dawley, adult, male

Outcomes and Safety

Summary of Outcomes The low frequency hemispherical ultrasound phased array system produced localized transcranial BBB disruption in rat brain. The disruption region increased with applied power, and high power cause severe brain tissue hemorrhage,.
Safety-related matter High power cause severe brain tissue hemorrhage. No damage found 40 W

Brain Region

Visualization unavailable

Ultrasound Parameters

Ultrasound instrument 32 channel low frequency hemispherical ultrasound phased-array system; 31 element hemispherical phased array
FUS Frequency 270 kHz
FUS Pressure 0.49 Mpa, 0.74 Mpa
FUS Mode pulsed
Pulse duration 10 ms
Duration of a single FUS session 30 s
Focal Characteristics Focal depth: None; Focal length: None; Aperture size: 150 mm
Treatment frequency single sessions

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