Pitt Shield

Acoustic and thermal characterization of agar based phantoms used for evaluating focused ultrasound exposures.

Authors: Menikou G, Damianou C

This study describes a series of experimental work completed towards characterizing candidate materials for fabricating brain and muscle tissue mimicking phantoms. The acoustic speed, attenuation, impedance, thermal diffusivity, specific heat and thermal conductivity were measured. The resulting brain (2% w/v agar-1.2% w/v Silica Dioxide-25%v/v evaporated milk) and muscle tissue recipe (2% w/v agar-2% w/v Silica Dioxide-40%v/v evaporated milk) introduced a total attenuation coefficient of 0.59 dB/cm-MHz and 0.99 dB/cm-MHz respectively. Acrylonitrile Butadiene Styrene (ABS) possessed an attenuation coefficient of 16 dB/cm at 1 MHz which was found within the very wide range of attenuation coefficient values of human bones in literature. The thermal conductivity of the brain tissue phantom was estimated at 0.52 W/m°C and at 0.57 W/m.°Cfor the muscle. These values demonstrated that the proposed recipes conducted heat similar to the majority of most soft tissues found from bibliography. The soft tissue phantoms were also evaluated for their thermal repeatability after treating them repeatedly at different locations with the same sonication protocol and configuration. The average coefficient of variation of the maximum temperature at focus between the different locations was 2.6% for the brain phantom and 2.8% for the muscle phantom. The proposed phantom closely matched the acoustic and thermal properties of tissues. Experiments using MR thermometry demonstrated the usefulness of this phantom to evaluate ultrasonic exposures.

Introduction

Purpose Thermal ablation
Study Objective To characterize candidate materials for fabricating brain and muscle tissue-mimicking phantoms by measuring their acoustic and thermal properties.
Cargo name and characteristics Agar gel (2% w/v agar polymer hydrogel matrix used as bulk phantom material); Silica dioxide (SiO2) powder, 0.5–10 μm particles, used as scattering agent (micro-/mesoparticles); Evaporated milk (condensed milk, 10–50% v/v in gels, protein/fat-containing biological absorber to increase acoustic absorption); Acrylonitrile Butadiene Styrene (ABS) thermoplastic plates (solid polymer, 2.5–5 mm thick) used as bone-mimicking material with high ultrasound attenuation.

Outcomes and Safety

Summary of Outcomes Agar-based brain and muscle phantoms reproduced soft-tissue acoustic and thermal properties and yielded reproducible MR‑thermometry heating comparable to real muscle; successful focused‑ultrasound parameters included 1.14 MHz at 20 W for 30 s (spherically focused transducer, focal depth ~2 cm) which matched porcine muscle heating, and 25 W for 60 s which produced clear depth‑dependent heating in the brain phantom.
Duration of biological effect 30 s
Safety-related matter The paper notes that agar gels are non-toxic and easy to prepare; no adverse effects or safety concerns are reported for the phantom materials or experimental procedures. Temperatures induced by sonication were measured to characterize thermal response, but no safety incidents or harmful effects are described.

Brain Region

Visualization unavailable

Ultrasound Parameters

Ultrasound instrument Etalon ESN-410-SCBI 3.5 MHz transducers (Etalon) — 10 mm circular aperture; Pulser/receiver: Panametrics 500PR (Olympus Corp, Tokyo, Japan)
FUS Frequency 3.5 MHz, 1.8 MHz (−3 dB bandwidth), 1 MHz
Focal Characteristics Focal depth: None; Focal length: None; Aperture size: 10 mm
Treatment frequency multiple sessions

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