Histologic safety of transcranial focused ultrasound neuromodulation and magnetic resonance acoustic radiation force imaging in rhesus macaques and sheep.
Authors: Gaur P, Casey KM, Kubanek J, Li N, Mohammadjavadi M, Saenz Y, Glover GH, Bouley DM, Pauly KB
Neuromodulation by transcranial focused ultrasound (FUS) offers the potential to non-invasively treat specific brain regions, with treatment location verified by magnetic resonance acoustic radiation force imaging (MR-ARFI). To investigate the safety of these methods prior to widespread clinical use, we report histologic findings in two large animal models following FUS neuromodulation and MR-ARFI. Two rhesus macaques and thirteen Dorset sheep were studied. FUS neuromodulation was targeted to the primary visual cortex in rhesus macaques and to subcortical locations, verified by MR-ARFI, in eleven sheep. Both rhesus macaques and five sheep received a single FUS session, whereas six sheep received repeated sessions three to six days apart. The remaining two control sheep did not receive ultrasound but otherwise underwent the same anesthetic and MRI procedures as the eleven experimental sheep. Hematoxylin and eosin-stained sections of brain tissue (harvested zero to eleven days following FUS) were evaluated for tissue damage at FUS and control locations as well as tissue within the path of the FUS beam. TUNEL staining was used to evaluate for the presence of apoptosis in sheep receiving high dose FUS. No FUS-related pre-mortem histologic findings were observed in the rhesus macaques or in any of the examined sheep. Extravascular red blood cells (RBCs) were present within the meninges of all sheep, regardless of treatment group. Similarly, small aggregates of perivascular RBCs were rarely noted in non-target regions of neural parenchyma of FUS-treated (8/11) and untreated (2/2) sheep. However, no concurrent histologic abnormalities were observed, consistent with RBC extravasation occurring as post-mortem artifact following brain extraction. Sheep within the high dose FUS group were TUNEL-negative at the targeted site of FUS. The absence of FUS-related histologic findings suggests that the neuromodulation and MR-ARFI protocols evaluated do not cause tissue damage.
Introduction
Purpose
transcranial ultrasound stimulation
Study Objective
Investigate histologic safety of transcranial focused ultrasound neuromodulation and MR acoustic radiation force imaging (MR-ARFI) in two large animal models (rhesus macaque and sheep)
Animal model / Human subject
rhesus macaque (2 males, 4.6-4.8 kg) and Dorset sheep (13, 22-36 kg)
Disease model
healthy
MRI or image guidance method
Yes (MRI)
Targeted brain region(s)
Primary Visual Cortex (Macaque); Subcortical (Sheep, E.G., Lateral Geniculate Nucleus)
Outcomes and Safety
Summary of Outcomes
No FUS-related pre-mortem histologic damage in macaques or sheep. Extravascular red blood cells were observed in meninges and rarely in parenchyma of all sheep (including controls), attributed to post-mortem artifact. TUNEL-negative at high-dose sites. Supports safety of tested neuromodulation and MR-ARFI protocols.
Brain Region
Ultrasound Parameters
Ultrasound instrument
Sonic Concepts H-115 single-element 270 kHz (macaque); ExAblate 2100 1024-element phased array 550 kHz (sheep)
FUS Frequency
270 kHz (macaque) / 550 kHz (sheep)
FUS Intensity
ISPTA 0.4-25.8 W/cm² (macaque, in situ); 0.6-13.8 W/cm² (sheep, in situ)
FUS Pressure
0.25-4 Mpa
peak negative pressure 0.5-4 MPa (free-field); in situ estimated: macaque ~0.3-2.4 MPa (40% loss), sheep 0.25-0.9 MPa (neuromodulation)
FUS Mode
pulsed
Pulse duration
300ms
300 ms (macaque) / 200-300 ms (sheep)
Duration of a single FUS session
8.3min
8.3 min (macaque, 500 bursts); sheep: 6-20 min
Focal Characteristics
axial FWHM 17-20 mm, lateral 3.5-6 mm
macaque: axial FWHM ~17 mm, lateral ~6 mm; sheep: axial ~20 mm, lateral ~3.5 mm
Treatment frequency
single session (macaque); repeated sessions (sheep: 2-3 sessions over 3-6 days)
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