Focused ultrasound induced opening of the blood-brain barrier disrupts inter-hemispheric resting state functional connectivity in the rat brain.
Authors: Todd N, Zhang Y, Arcaro M, Becerra L, Borsook D, Livingstone M, McDannold N
Focused ultrasound (FUS) is a technology capable of delivering therapeutic levels of energy through the intact skull to a tightly localized brain region. Combining the FUS pressure wave with intravenously injected microbubbles creates forces on blood vessel walls that open the blood-brain barrier (BBB). This noninvasive and localized opening of the BBB allows for targeted delivery of pharmacological agents into the brain for use in therapeutic development. It is possible to use FUS power levels such that the BBB is opened without damaging local tissues. However, open questions remain related to the effects that FUS-induced BBB opening has on brain function including local physiology and vascular hemodynamics. We evaluated the effects that FUS-induced BBB opening has on resting state functional magnetic resonance imaging (rs-fMRI) metrics. Data from rs-fMRI was acquired in rats that underwent sham FUS BBB vs. FUS BBB opening targeted to the right primary somatosensory cortex hindlimb region (S1HL). FUS BBB opening reduced the functional connectivity between the right S1HL and other sensorimotor regions, including statistically significant reduction of connectivity to the homologous region in the left hemisphere (left S1HL). The effect was observed in all three metrics analyzed: functional connectivity between anatomically defined regions, whole brain voxel-wise correlation maps based on anatomical seeds, and spatial patterns from independent component analysis. Connectivity metrics for other regions where the BBB was not perturbed were not affected. While it is not clear whether the effect is vascular or neuronal in origin, these results suggest that even safe levels of FUS BBB opening have an effect on the physiological processes that drive the signals measured by BOLD fMRI. As such these effects must be accounted for when carrying out studies using fMRI to evaluate the effects of pharmacological agents delivered via FUS-induced BBB opening.
Introduction
Purpose
Drug delivery with BBB opening
Study Objective
To evaluate the effects of focused ultrasound-induced blood–brain barrier opening on resting-state fMRI functional connectivity in rats.
Animal model / Human subject
rat, Sprague-Dawley, 10–12 weeks, male
Disease model
healthy
MRI or image guidance method
MRI guidance
Targeted brain region(s)
Somatosensory Cortex
Outcomes and Safety
Summary of Outcomes
FUS-mediated BBBO in the rat S1HL significantly reduced resting-state functional connectivity with the contralateral cortex, despite no evidence of overt tissue damage
Duration of biological effect
not reported
Safety-related matter
The procedure was histologically safe, but a transient reduction in BOLD functional connectivity was observed at the sonicated site, suggesting subtle physiological perturbations.
Brain Region
Ultrasound Parameters
Ultrasound instrument
MRI-guided FUS system (RK-100, FUS Instruments)
FUS Frequency
1.68 MHz
FUS Intensity
not reported
FUS Pressure
0.38 Mpa
FUS Mode
not reported
Pulse duration
10 ms
Duration of a single FUS session
120 s
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