The effect of transcranial focused ultrasound target location on the acoustic feedback control performance during blood-brain barrier opening with nanobubbles.
Authors: Cheng B, Bing C, Chopra R
Real-time acoustic feedback control based on harmonic emissions of stimulated microbubbles may be important for facilitating the clinical adoption of focused ultrasound (FUS)-induced blood-brain barrier (BBB) opening, both to ensure safe acoustic exposures, and to achieve repeatable and consistent opening. Previously our group demonstrated that successful BBB opening was achievable with both commercially available microbubbles and custom-made nanobubbles under acoustic feedback control. In a recent study, we demonstrated the acoustic control performance was not sensitive to the nanobubble concentration within 10<sup>9</sup>-10<sup>11</sup> bubbles/ml. The goal of this study was to examine the effect of the ultrasound target location in the rat brain on the acoustic control quality during BBB opening with nanobubbles. Temporal analysis of the received acoustic signals during each ultrasound pulse indicated that stable nanobubble oscillation was present throughout the entire 10 ms ultrasound exposure. The acoustic feedback control signals were very sensitive to the brain spatial location in rats. There appears to be a shared pattern of acoustic control stability in the brain across different animals, suggesting anatomical features are an underlying cause. The findings emphasize the importance of tuning acoustic feedback control algorithms for specific rodent brain regions of interest to ensure optimal performance.
Introduction
Purpose
other
Study Objective
To evaluate how the spatial location of the ultrasound focus in the rat brain affects acoustic feedback control performance during focused ultrasound–induced blood–brain barrier opening using nanobubbles.
Animal model / Human subject
rat, Sprague-Dawley, 8–10 weeks, male
Disease model
healthy
Targeted brain region(s)
Striatum
Outcomes and Safety
Summary of Outcomes
Real-time ultraharmonic feedback control sustained stable nanobubble cavitation for BBBO, though control stability was significantly influenced by the spatial x-y location of the ultrasound focus.
Duration of biological effect
10 ms
Safety-related matter
The feedback controller maintained acoustic pressures <0.5 MPa, suppressing inertial cavitation and ensuring a safe, lesion-free BBB opening.
Brain Region
Ultrasound Parameters
Ultrasound instrument
dual-transducer focused ultrasound system
FUS Frequency
0.5 MHz
FUS Intensity
not reported
FUS Pressure
0.5 MPa
FUS Mode
pulsed
Pulse duration
10 ms
Duration of a single FUS session
30s
Treatment frequency
single session
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