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Factors Related to Successful Energy Transmission of Focused Ultrasound through a Skull : A Study in Human Cadavers and Its Comparison with Clinical Experiences.

Authors: Jung NY, Rachmilevitch I, Sibiger O, Amar T, Zadicario E, Chang JW

Although magnetic resonance guided focused ultrasound (MRgFUS) has been used as minimally invasive and effective neurosurgical treatment, it exhibits some limitations, mainly related to acoustic properties of the skull barrier. This study was undertaken to identify skull characteristics that contribute to optimal ultrasonic energy transmission for MRgFUS procedures. For ex vivo skull experiments, various acoustic fields were measured under different conditions, using five non-embalmed cadaver skulls. For clinical skull analyses, brain computed tomography data of 46 patients who underwent MRgFUS ablations (18 unilateral thalamotomy, nine unilateral pallidotomy, and 19 bilateral capsulotomy) were retrospectively reviewed. Patients' skull factors and sonication parameters were comparatively analyzed with respect to the cadaveric skulls. Skull experiments identified three important factors related skull penetration of ultrasound, including skull density ratio (SDR), skull volume, and incidence angle of the acoustic rays against the skull surface. In clinical results, SDR and skull volume correlated with maximal temperature (Tmax) and energy requirement to achieve Tmax (p<0.05). In addition, considering the incidence angle determined by brain target location, less energy was required to reach Tmax in the central, rather than lateral targets particularly when compared between thalamotomy and capsulotomy (p<0.05). This study reconfirmed previously identified skull factors, including SDR and skull volume, for successful MRgFUS; it identified an additional factor, incidence angle of acoustic rays against the skull surface. To guarantee successful transcranial MRgFUS treatment without suffering these various skull issues, further technical improvements are required.

Introduction

Purpose Thermal ablation
Study Objective To identify skull characteristics that contribute to optimal ultrasonic energy transmission for magnetic resonance guided focused ultrasound (MRgFUS) procedures.
Disease model essential tremor; Parkinson's disease; obsessive-compulsive disorder
MRI or image guidance method Magnetic resonance guided (MRgFUS)
Targeted brain region(s) Vim, Gpi, Alic

Outcomes and Safety

Summary of Outcomes Skull density ratio (SDR ≥ 0.6) and acoustic incidence angle are critical determinants of heating efficiency in MRgFUS; central targets (VIM) require significantly less energy than lateral targets (ALIC).
Duration of biological effect not reported
Safety-related matter No adverse effects reported; lower SDR and high incidence angles increase the risk of insufficient focal heating, potentially leading to treatment failure in lateral brain targets.

Brain Region

Ultrasound Parameters

Ultrasound instrument Exablate Neuro 4000 (Insightec)
FUS Frequency 650 kHz
FUS Intensity not reported
FUS Pressure not reported
FUS Mode not reported
Pulse duration not reported
Duration of a single FUS session 25 s
Treatment frequency single session

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