Pitt Shield

Guiding and monitoring focused ultrasound mediated blood-brain barrier opening in rats using power Doppler imaging and passive acoustic mapping.

Authors: Singh A, Kusunose J, Phipps MA, Wang F, Chen LM, Caskey CF

The blood-brain barrier (BBB) prevents harmful toxins from entering brain but can also inhibit therapeutic molecules designed to treat neurodegenerative diseases. Focused ultrasound (FUS) combined with microbubbles can enhance permeability of BBB and is often performed under MRI guidance. We present an all-ultrasound system capable of targeting desired regions to open BBB with millimeter-scale accuracy in two dimensions based on Doppler images. We registered imaging coordinates to FUS coordinates with target registration error of 0.6 ± 0.3 mm and used the system to target microbubbles flowing in cellulose tube in two in vitro scenarios (agarose-embedded and through a rat skull), while receiving echoes on imaging transducer. We created passive acoustic maps from received echoes and found error between intended location in imaging plane and location of pixel with maximum intensity after passive acoustic maps reconstruction to be within 2 mm in 5/6 cases. We validated ultrasound-guided procedure in three in vivo rat brains by delivering MRI contrast agent to cortical regions of rat brains after BBB opening. Landmark-based registration of vascular maps created with MRI and Doppler ultrasound revealed BBB opening inside the intended focus with targeting accuracy within 1.5 mm. Combined use of power Doppler imaging with passive acoustic mapping demonstrates an ultrasound-based solution to guide focused ultrasound with high precision in rodents.

Introduction

Purpose Drug delivery with BBB opening
Study Objective To develop and validate an all‑ultrasound system that uses Doppler imaging and passive acoustic mapping to guide and monitor millimeter‑scale focused ultrasound blood–brain barrier opening in rodents.
Animal model / Human subject Rat (species: Rattus norvegicus); strain: not specified; age: not specified; sex: not specified
MRI or image guidance method Ultrasound guidance using Doppler imaging (power Doppler) and passive acoustic mapping, with imaging-to-FUS coordinate registration; landmark-based registration between MRI vascular maps and Doppler ultrasound for validation
Targeted brain region(s) Cortical Regions
Cargo name and characteristics MRI contrast agent (small-molecule MRI contrast agent)

Outcomes and Safety

Summary of Outcomes Microbubble-enhanced focused ultrasound guided by power Doppler and RCB passive acoustic mapping successfully opened the blood–brain barrier in rats (focal openings ~0.2–0.3 mm^3 with targeting errors ≈1.0–1.4 mm) and localized cavitation within ≲2 mm in most in vitro/skull-phantom tests; successful tested parameters included trains of 100 μs FUS pulses (receive window 96 μs) repeated at 9.8 kHz, pressures of 0.6 MPa in vitro (and ~1 MPa used in vivo), and RCB-PAM reconstruction using the first 96–288 μs of received data.
Duration of biological effect 150 s
Safety-related matter The authors note that sonications at 1 MPa are well above the inertial cavitation threshold and may have caused microbubble fragmentation at some foci (observed as reduced cavitation signatures), and they monitored inertial and stable cavitation doses to assess this. No explicit adverse events or tissue injuries are reported in the text.

Brain Region

Ultrasound Parameters

Focal Characteristics Focal depth: None; Focal length: None; Aperture size: None
Treatment frequency single

We are open to feedback. If you see a mistake or have a suggestion, please contact us.

← Back to Search