Pitt Shield

Radiation Force as a Physical Mechanism for Ultrasonic Neurostimulation of the <i>Ex Vivo</i> Retina.

Authors: Menz MD, Ye P, Firouzi K, Nikoozadeh A, Pauly KB, Khuri-Yakub P, Baccus SA

Focused ultrasound has been shown to be effective at stimulating neurons in many animal models, both <i>in vivo</i> and <i>ex vivo</i> Ultrasonic neuromodulation is the only noninvasive method of stimulation that could reach deep in the brain with high spatial-temporal resolution, and thus has potential for use in clinical applications and basic studies of the nervous system. Understanding the physical mechanism by which energy in a high acoustic frequency wave is delivered to stimulate neurons will be important to optimize this technology. We imaged the isolated salamander retina of either sex during ultrasonic stimuli that drive ganglion cell activity and observed micron scale displacements, consistent with radiation force, the nonlinear delivery of momentum by a propagating wave. We recorded ganglion cell spiking activity and changed the acoustic carrier frequency across a broad range (0.5-43 MHz), finding that increased stimulation occurs at higher acoustic frequencies, ruling out cavitation as an alternative possible mechanism. A quantitative radiation force model can explain retinal responses and could potentially explain previous <i>in vivo</i> results in the mouse, suggesting a new hypothesis to be tested <i>in vivo</i> Finally, we found that neural activity was strongly modulated by the distance between the transducer and the electrode array showing the influence of standing waves on the response. We conclude that radiation force is the dominant physical mechanism underlying ultrasonic neurostimulation in the <i>ex vivo</i> retina and propose that the control of standing waves is a new potential method to modulate these effects.<b>SIGNIFICANCE STATEMENT</b> Ultrasonic neurostimulation is a promising noninvasive technology that has potential for both basic research and clinical applications. The mechanisms of ultrasonic neurostimulation are unknown, making it difficult to optimize in any given application. We studied the physical mechanism by which ultrasound is converted into an effective energy form to cause neurostimulation in the retina and find that ultrasound acts via radiation force leading to a mechanical displacement of tissue. We further show that standing waves have a strong modulatory effect on activity. Our quantitative model by which ultrasound generates radiation force and leads to neural activity will be important in optimizing ultrasonic neurostimulation across a wide range of applications.

Introduction

Purpose Transcranial ultrasound stimulation
Study Objective Determine whether ultrasonic stimulation of the ex vivo salamander retina acts via radiation force (mechanical displacement) rather than cavitation, and to assess how acoustic frequency and standing waves modulate neural responses.
Animal model / Human subject Tiger salamander, either sex
Disease model Healthy
Targeted brain region(s) retina

Outcomes and Safety

Summary of Outcomes Focused ultrasound produced micron-scale tissue displacements via radiation force that evoked retinal ganglion cell spiking. Stimulation efficacy increased with higher acoustic frequencies (0.5–43 MHz) and was strongly modulated by standing waves.
Duration of biological effect Transient (during stimulation)
Safety-related matter No tissue damage, adverse effects, or safety concerns were reported during this ex vivo mechanistic study.

Brain Region

Ultrasound Parameters

Ultrasound instrument Custom 43 MHz transducer, Panametrics A319S, Olympus V305, Olympus V301
FUS Frequency 0.5, 2.25, 15, and 43 MHz
FUS Intensity Variable (e.g., 40 W/cm2, 56 W/cm2)
FUS Mode continuous
Duration of a single FUS session 1 s
Focal Characteristics Panametrics A319S: 0.5 inch diameter, 2 inch focal length

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