Pitt Shield

MRI detection of the thermal effects of focused ultrasound on the brain.

Authors: Vykhodtseva N, Sorrentino V, Jolesz FA, Bronson RT, Hynynen K

This study tested the hypothesis that MRI thermometry can be correlated with the different degrees of tissue damage observed after focused ultrasound (US) exposure of brain. The brains of 6 rabbits were sonicated to calibrate the MRI proton resonant shift with temperature. In addition, 13 rabbits were sonicated at acoustic powers ranging from 3.5 to 17.5 W. The experiments were performed in a 1.5-T MRI scanner with the temperature-sensitive phase imaging used during the sonications of 4-5 different locations in each rabbit. MR images were obtained 2 h and 2 days after the sonications, depending on when the animals were sacrificed. Whole brain histologic evaluation was performed by sectioning the brain and performing a microscopic investigation. The MRI-derived temperature elevation was found to correlate well with the degree of tissue damage. In addition to the common histology findings, apoptotic cells were observed in the lesions. The T1-weighted contrast enhanced and T2-weighted scans both detected the brain damage. The applied acoustic power did not correlate well with the degree of damage. As a conclusion, the results showed that the measurement of temperature elevations by MRI during sonications can improve the accuracy and safety of clinical US brain surgery.

Introduction

Purpose thermal ablation
Study Objective Investigating the feasibility of using MRI-measured temperature for quantifying the tissue damage caused by the FUS noinvassive approach
Animal model / Human subject adult male New Zealand white rabbits (3–4 kg)
Disease model healthy
MRI or image guidance method MRI
Targeted brain region(s) Midbrain

Outcomes and Safety

Summary of Outcomes Researchers proved that MRI thermometry can be used to predict the tissue damage that may be caused by invasive thermal surgeries of the brain. The threshold that tissue damage will always be detected is 53celcius, under the condtion that at the end of 10s exposure.
Duration of biological effect 4h-48h after the sonication
Safety-related matter It should be noted that this experiment aimed for tissue damage of invasive thermal surgeries. Researchers explained the tissue damage that they induced. There is no safety statement beyond the context and design of this experiment

Brain Region

Ultrasound Parameters

Ultrasound instrument a focused, piezoelectric transducer (with a100-mm diameter, 80-mm radius of curvature) with other home- assembled parts from different companies.
FUS Frequency 1.5MHz
FUS Intensity 240-1200W/cm2
FUS Mode UNSURE
Pulse duration 10s
Duration of a single FUS session 10s
Treatment frequency multiple sonications (4-5 locations in each rabbits)

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