Microbubble type and distribution dependence of focused ultrasound-induced blood-brain barrier opening.
Authors: Wang S, Samiotaki G, Olumolade O, Feshitan JA, Konofagou EE
Focused ultrasound, in the presence of microbubbles, has been used non-invasively to induce reversible blood-brain barrier (BBB) opening in both rodents and non-human primates. This study was aimed at identifying the dependence of BBB opening properties on polydisperse microbubble (all clinically approved microbubbles are polydisperse) type and distribution by using a clinically approved ultrasound contrast agent (Definity microbubbles) and in-house prepared polydisperse (IHP) microbubbles in mice. A total of 18 C57 BL/6 mice (n = 3) were used in this study, and each mouse was injected with either Definity or IHP microbubbles via the tail vein. The concentration and size distribution of activated Definity and IHP microbubbles were measured, and the microbubbles were diluted to 6 × 10(8)/mL before injection. Immediately after microbubble administration, mice were subjected to focused ultrasound with the following parameters: frequency = 1.5 MHz, pulse repetition frequency = 10 Hz, 1000 cycles, in situ peak rarefactional acoustic pressures = 0.3, 0.45 and 0.6 MPa for a sonication duration of 60 s. Contrast-enhanced magnetic resonance imaging was used to confirm BBB opening and allowed for image-based analysis. Permeability of the treated region and volume of BBB opening did not significantly differ between the two types of microbubbles (p > 0.05) at peak rarefractional acoustic pressures of 0.45 and 0.6 MPa, whereas IHP microbubbles had significantly higher permeability and opening volume (p < 0.05) at the relatively lower pressure of 0.3 MPa. The results from this study indicate that microbubble type and distribution could have significant effects on focused ultrasound-induced BBB opening at lower pressures, but less important effects at higher pressures, possibly because of the stable cavitation that governs the former. This difference may have become less significant at higher pressures, where inertial cavitation typically occurs.
Introduction
Purpose
Drug delivery with BBB opening
Study Objective
To determine how the type and size distribution of polydisperse microbubbles (Definity® versus in-house IHP) affect focused ultrasound-induced blood–brain barrier opening in mice.
Animal model / Human subject
C57BL/6 mice
Disease model
Healthy
MRI or image guidance method
Stereotaxic
Targeted brain region(s)
Hippocampus
Outcomes and Safety
Summary of Outcomes
FUS produced reversible BBB opening with both microbubble types yielding similar permeability and opening volumes at 0.45 MPa and 0.6 MPa. However, IHP produced significantly greater permeability and opening volume at 0.3 MPa.
Duration of biological effect
3 days
Safety-related matter
No histological damage was observed in the Definity groups, but minor injury (several dark neurons) was detected in one mouse injected with IHP microbubbles sonicated at 0.45 Mpa
Brain Region
Ultrasound Parameters
Ultrasound instrument
Single element FUS transducer (Imasonic)
FUS Frequency
1.5 MHz
FUS Pressure
0.3 MPa, 0.45 MPa, 0.6 MPa
FUS Mode
pulsed
Pulse duration
0.667 ms
Duration of a single FUS session
60 s
Focal Characteristics
Focal depth: 7.5 mm; Focal length: 60 mm; Aperture size: 60 mm
Treatment frequency
Single session
We are open to feedback. If you see a mistake or have a suggestion, please contact us.
← Back to Search