Magnetic resonance imaging-guided focused ultrasound for thermal ablation in the brain: a feasibility study in a swine model.
Authors: Cohen ZR, Zaubermann J, Harnof S, Mardor Y, Nass D, Zadicario E, Hananel A, Castel D, Faibel M, Ram Z
Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI)-guided focused ultrasound is a novel technique that was developed to enable precise, image-guided targeting and destruction of tumors by thermocoagulation. The system, ExAblate2000, is a focused ultrasound delivery system embedded within the MRI bed of a conventional diagnostic MRI scanner. The device delivers small volumetric sonications from an ultrasound phased array transmitter that converge energy to selectively destroy the target. Temperature maps generated by the MRI scanner verify the location and thermal rise as feedback, as well as thermal destruction. To assess the safety, feasibility, and precision of this technology in the brain, we have used the ExAblate system to create predefined thermal lesions in the brains of pigs. Ten pigs underwent bilateral craniectomy to provide a bone window for the ultrasound beams. Seven to 10 days later, the animals were anesthetized and positioned in the ExAblate system. A predefined, 1-cm frontal para ventricular region was delineated as the target and treated with multiple sonications. MRI was performed immediately and 1 week after treatment. The animals were then sacrificed and the brains removed for pathological study. The size of individual sonication points and the location of the lesion were compared between the planned dose maps, posttreatment MRI scans, and pathological specimen. High-energy sonications led to precise coagulation necrosis of the specified targets as shown by subsequent MRI, macroscopic, and histological analysis. The thermal lesions were sharply demarcated from the surrounding brain with no anatomic or histological abnormalities outside the target. MRI-guided focused ultrasound proved a precise and an effective means to destroy anatomically predefined brain targets by thermocoagulation with minimal associated edema or damage to adjacent structures. Contrast-enhanced T1-, T2-, and diffusion-weighted MRI scans may be used for real-time assessment of tissue destruction.
Introduction
Purpose
Thermal Ablation
Study Objective
To evaluate the feasibility of MRI-guided focused ultrasound for performing thermal ablation in the brain using a swine model.
Animal model / Human subject
Swine (pig); strain: not specified; age: not specified; sex: not specified
MRI or image guidance method
Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI)-guided
Outcomes and Safety
Summary of Outcomes
MRI-guided focused ultrasound produced successful thermal ablation of brain tissue in a swine model, demonstrating feasibility; the provided text does not specify which ultrasound parameters were tested or found successful.
Safety-related matter
The provided text contains only the paper title and includes no discussion of safety, adverse effects, or related findings.
Brain Region
Ultrasound Parameters
Focal Characteristics
Focal depth: None; Focal length: None; Aperture size: None
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