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Analgesic effect of simultaneously targeting multiple pain processing brain circuits in an aged humanized mouse model of chronic pain by transcranial focused ultrasound.

Authors: Kim MG, Yeh CY, Yu K, Li Z, Gupta K, He B

Low-intensity transcranial focused ultrasound (tFUS) has recently been shown to noninvasively and non-pharmacologically modulate pain hypersensitivity with high spatial specificity and deep brain penetration. However, the lack of knowledge about its effectiveness for pain management in older subjects vulnerable to severe pain who are also at increased risk of cognitive impairment, presents significant challenges. Additionally, current opioid pain treatments require hospital visits, limiting unwanted serious side effects with multiple liabilities, and device-based pain treatments are typically administered at medical facilities with bulky and expensive equipment, limiting accessibility and thus highlighting the need for at-home non-pharmacological treatment options. Here, we present a more accessible, noninvasive tFUS pain treatment strategy for senior subjects. This approach involves simultaneously targeting multiple pain-processing circuits using a battery-powered, compact, and low-cost ultrasound analog front end (UAFE). We developed and evaluated the performance of the UAFE capable of generating sufficiently high-amplitude output with significantly lower noise levels compared to a commercial transmitter. Using a humanized sickle mouse model of chronic hyperalgesia, we found that tFUS stimulation targeting multiple pain-processing circuits effectively reduces heat hyperalgesia in aged female mice. In addition to its efficacy, our behavioral-based safety assessment revealed no adverse effects on motor functions. These results suggest that using a battery-powered, compact UAFE to simultaneously target multiple pain-processing circuits can effectively suppress heat pain-related behaviors in aged female sickle mice without negatively impacting motor coordination and balance. This highlights the potential for further development of fully home-based tFUS pain treatment for seniors.

Introduction

Purpose Transcranial ultrasound stimulation
Study Objective To develop and evaluate a battery-powered compact ultrasound analog front end for multi-target low-intensity transcranial focused ultrasound and test its efficacy and safety in reducing heat hyperalgesia in aged female sickle mice.
Animal model / Human subject mouse, HbSS-BERK, 8–21 months, female
Disease model Sickle cell disease (humanized Berkley sickle mouse model; chronic pain / heat hyperalgesia)
MRI or image guidance method Anatomical landmark guidance: single‑element transducer placed at intersection of the posterior end of the zygomatic structure and the rostral-caudal line then moved 3.5 mm posterior; collimator set at a 23° incidence angle to target S1HL and AI. Circuit targeting estimated using the Allen Mouse Brain Atlas. Planning/validation used CT-derived skull model with k-wave acoustic field simulations and hydrophone 3D scanning calibration.
Targeted brain region(s) Somatosensory Cortex

Outcomes and Safety

Summary of Outcomes A portable battery-powered UAFE system enabled multi-target tFUS, significantly reducing heat hyperalgesia in aged sickle cell disease mice.
Duration of biological effect 15 min
Safety-related matter The procedure was safe with no impairment of motor coordination or balance observed in the rotarod test.

Brain Region

Ultrasound Parameters

Ultrasound instrument custom-built battery-powered UAFE system
FUS Frequency 500 kHz
FUS Intensity not reported
FUS Pressure 0.15 MPa
FUS Mode continuous
Pulse duration 200 µs
Duration of a single FUS session 20 min
Treatment frequency single

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