A High-Frequency Phased Array System for Transcranial Ultrasound Delivery in Small Animals.
Authors: Rahimi S, Jones RM, Hynynen K
Existing systems for applying transcranial focused ultrasound (FUS) in small animals produce large focal volumes relative to the size of cerebral structures available for interrogation. The use of high ultrasonic frequencies can improve targeting specificity; however, the aberrations induced by rodent calvaria at megahertz frequencies severely distort the acoustic fields produced by single-element focused transducers. Here, we present the design, fabrication, and characterization of a high-frequency phased array system for transcranial FUS delivery in small animals. A transducer array was constructed by micromachining a spherically curved PZT-5H bowl (diameter = 25 mm, radius of curvature = 20 mm, fundamental frequency = 3.3 MHz) into 64 independent elements of equal surface area. The acoustic field generated by the phased array was measured at various target locations using a calibrated fiber-optic hydrophone, both in free-field conditions as well as through ex vivo rat skullcaps with and without hydrophone-assisted phase aberration corrections. Large field-of-view acoustic field simulations were carried out to investigate potential grating lobe formation. The focal beam size obtained when targeting the array's geometric focus was [Formula: see text] mm in water. The array can steer the FUS beam electronically over cylindrical volumes of 4.5 mm in diameter and 6 mm in height without introducing grating lobes. Insertion of a rat skullcap resulted in substantial distortion of the acoustic field ( [Formula: see text]% [Formula: see text]); however, phase corrections restored partial focal quality ( [Formula: see text]% [Formula: see text]). Using phase corrections, the array is capable of generating a trans-rat skull peak negative focal pressure of up to ~2.0 MPa, which is sufficient for microbubble-mediated blood-brain barrier permeabilization at this frequency.
Introduction
Purpose
Other
Study Objective
To design, fabricate, and characterize a high-frequency (3.3 MHz) phased-array transducer for transcranial focused ultrasound delivery in small animals and evaluate its beam steering and skull-aberration correction capabilities.
Animal model / Human subject
Rat; strain: not reported; age: not reported; sex: male
MRI or image guidance method
Hydrophone-assisted phase aberration correction using a calibrated fiber‑optic hydrophone (no MRI, other image guidance, or stereotactic method reported)
Targeted brain region(s)
Mid-Brain
Outcomes and Safety
Summary of Outcomes
Using a 64‑element, 3.3 MHz spherically curved PZT-5H phased array with hydrophone-assisted phase-aberration correction, the system produced electronically-steered focal beams through rat skullcaps and achieved high trans-skull focal pressures
Safety-related matter
No safety issues or adverse effects are reported; the paper notes the array can generate peak negative focal pressures up to ~2.0 MPa, which is sufficient for microbubble-mediated blood–brain barrier permeabilization.
Brain Region
Ultrasound Parameters
Ultrasound instrument
Spherically-curved PZT-5H phased array (micromachined into 64 independent elements); diameter = 25 mm; radius of curvature = 20 mm; fundamental frequency = 3.3 MHz (manufacturer not specified)
FUS Frequency
3.3 MHz
FUS Pressure
∼2.0 MPa
FUS Mode
pulsed
Pulse duration
20 us
Focal Characteristics
Focal depth: 2.6 mm; Focal length: 20 mm; Aperture size: 25 mm
Treatment frequency
single session
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