Identifying the inertial cavitation threshold and skull effects in a vessel phantom using focused ultrasound and microbubbles.
Authors: Tung YS, Choi JJ, Baseri B, Konofagou EE
Focused ultrasound (FUS) in combination with microbubbles has been shown capable of delivering large molecules to the brain parenchyma through opening of the blood-brain barrier (BBB). However, the mechanism behind the opening remains unknown. To investigate the pressure threshold for inertial cavitation of preformed microbubbles during sonication, passive cavitation detection in conjunction with B-mode imaging was used. A cerebral vessel was simulated by generating a cylindrical hole of 610 microm in diameter inside a polyacrylamide gel and saturating its volume with microbubbles. Definity microbubbles (Mean diameter range: 1.1-3.3 microm, Lantheus Medical Imaging, N. Billerica, MA, USA) were injected prior to sonication (frequency: 1.525 MHz; pulse length: 100 cycles; PRF: 10 Hz; sonication duration: 2 s) through an excised mouse skull. The acoustic emissions due to the cavitation response were passively detected using a cylindrically focused hydrophone, confocal with the FUS transducer and a linear-array transducer with the field of view perpendicular to the FUS beam. The broadband spectral response acquired at the passive cavitation detector (PCD) and the B-mode images identified the occurrence and location of the inertial cavitation, respectively. Findings indicated that the peak-rarefactional pressure threshold was approximately equal to 0.45 MPa, with or without the skull present. Mouse skulls did not affect the threshold of inertial cavitation but resulted in a lower inertial cavitation dose. The broadband response could be captured through the murine skull, so the same PCD set-up can be used in future in vivo applications.
Introduction
Purpose
other
Study Objective
To investigate the effects of the mouse skull on the peak-rarefactional pressure threshold of inertial cavitation in a vessel phantom.
Animal model / Human subject
Three brown mice (strain: C57BL/6, sex: male, mass: 20–25 g)
Disease model
healthy
MRI or image guidance method
stereotactic
Outcomes and Safety
Summary of Outcomes
This study found that the inertial cavitation pressure threshold (0.45 MPa) in an ex vivo vessel phantom was not affected by the presence of a mouse skull, although the skull reduced the detected cavitation dose. More importantly, preliminary in vivo experiments indicated that the blood-brain barrier (BBB) could be opened at a lower pressure (0.30 MPa) without the occurrence of inertial cavitation. This provides evidence for distinguishing between safe (stable cavitation) and potentially harmful (inertial cavitation) mechanisms underlying BBB opening.
Safety-related matter
BBB opening was achieved at 0.30 MPa without inertial cavitation, suggesting a potential safer operating window.
Brain Region
Ultrasound Parameters
Ultrasound instrument
A single-element circular focused ultrasound transducer (Riverside Research Institute, New York, NY, USA)
FUS Frequency
1.525 MHz
FUS Pressure
0.30, 0.45, 0.60, 0.75, 0.90 Mpa (peak negative pressure)
FUS Mode
pulsed
Pulse duration
≈ 67 μs (a total of 100 cycles)
Duration of a single FUS session
2s
Focal Characteristics
lateral FWHM: 1.32 mm, axial FWHM: 13.0 mm
Treatment frequency
multiple sessions: numbers not specified
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