Increased anatomical specificity of neuromodulation via modulated focused ultrasound.
Authors: Mehić E, Xu JM, Caler CJ, Coulson NK, Moritz CT, Mourad PD
Transcranial ultrasound can alter brain function transiently and nondestructively, offering a new tool to study brain function now and inform future therapies. Previous research on neuromodulation implemented pulsed low-frequency (250-700 kHz) ultrasound with spatial peak temporal average intensities (ISPTA) of 0.1-10 W/cm(2). That work used transducers that either insonified relatively large volumes of mouse brain (several mL) with relatively low-frequency ultrasound and produced bilateral motor responses, or relatively small volumes of brain (on the order of 0.06 mL) with relatively high-frequency ultrasound that produced unilateral motor responses. This study seeks to increase anatomical specificity to neuromodulation with modulated focused ultrasound (mFU). Here, 'modulated' means modifying a focused 2-MHz carrier signal dynamically with a 500-kHz signal as in vibro-acoustography, thereby creating a low-frequency but small volume (approximately 0.015 mL) source of neuromodulation. Application of transcranial mFU to lightly anesthetized mice produced various motor movements with high spatial selectivity (on the order of 1 mm) that scaled with the temporal average ultrasound intensity. Alone, mFU and focused ultrasound (FUS) each induced motor activity, including unilateral motions, though anatomical location and type of motion varied. Future work should include larger animal models to determine the relative efficacy of mFU versus FUS. Other studies should determine the biophysical processes through which they act. Also of interest is exploration of the potential research and clinical applications for targeted, transcranial neuromodulation created by modulated focused ultrasound, especially mFU's ability to produce compact sources of ultrasound at the very low frequencies (10-100s of Hertz) that are commensurate with the natural frequencies of the brain.
Introduction
Purpose
Transcranial ultrasound stimulation
Study Objective
To demonstrate that modulated focused ultrasound (mFU) can achieve highly spatially specific transcranial neuromodulation in mice and to compare its motor effects with conventional focused ultrasound (FUS).
Animal model / Human subject
Mouse (Mus musculus), C57BL/6, 8–12 weeks, male
Disease model
Healthy
MRI or image guidance method
Diagnostic ultrasound imaging to determine target depth, with transducer positioned using a micro-positioner (3D coordinate grid) and laser alignment (green lasers); no MRI or stereotactic frame reported.
Targeted brain region(s)
Parietal Region
Target coordinates
DV: 5 mm below the skin surface. AP/ML: not specified numerically (stimulation grid spanned bregma to lambda with 1 mm spacing; planar positions A–C were 3 mm apart along midline).
Outcomes and Safety
Summary of Outcomes
Transcranial ultrasound (both modulated focused ultrasound, mFU, and unmodulated focused ultrasound, FUS) transiently and nondestructively evoked motor movements in lightly anesthetized mice. mFU produced around 1 mm spatial selectivity, and reponse type and magnitude varied with stimulation location and intensity.
Safety-related matter
Acute histological analysis showed no brain damage or artifacts and repeated mFU/FUS applications were reproducible, suggesting no focal or acute alteration of brain function. The protocols used intensities within ranges previously reported as efficacious and safe, though some values approached FDA limits and the authors recommend continued attention to safety.
Brain Region
Ultrasound Parameters
Ultrasound instrument
Planar piston transducer: Ultran GS500-D13 (Ultran Group, State College, PA, USA); aperture/diameter: None. Focused dual-element coaxial, confocal circular transducer: H-148 (Sonic Concepts, Woodinville, WA, USA) with filled central opening; aperture/diameter: None.
FUS Frequency
250–700 kHz; 500 kHz; 1.75 MHz; 2.00 MHz; 2.25 MHz
FUS Intensity
5.25 W/cm2; 0.15–5.25 W/cm2
FUS Mode
pulsed
Pulse duration
0.2 ms
Duration of a single FUS session
approximately 10 s
Focal Characteristics
Focal depth: 5 mm; Focal length: 8 mm (axial extent of focus at half-pressure); Aperture size: None
Treatment frequency
Multiple
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