Pitt Shield

Experimental demonstration of passive acoustic imaging in the human skull cavity using CT-based aberration corrections.

Authors: Jones RM, O'Reilly MA, Hynynen K

Experimentally verify a previously described technique for performing passive acoustic imaging through an intact human skull using noninvasive, computed tomography (CT)-based aberration corrections Jones et al. [Phys. Med. Biol. 58, 4981-5005 (2013)]. A sparse hemispherical receiver array (30 cm diameter) consisting of 128 piezoceramic discs (2.5 mm diameter, 612 kHz center frequency) was used to passively listen through ex vivo human skullcaps (n = 4) to acoustic emissions from a narrow-band fixed source (1 mm diameter, 516 kHz center frequency) and from ultrasound-stimulated (5 cycle bursts, 1 Hz pulse repetition frequency, estimated in situ peak negative pressure 0.11-0.33 MPa, 306 kHz driving frequency) Definity™ microbubbles flowing through a thin-walled tube phantom. Initial in vivo feasibility testing of the method was performed. The performance of the method was assessed through comparisons to images generated without skull corrections, with invasive source-based corrections, and with water-path control images. For source locations at least 25 mm from the inner skull surface, the modified reconstruction algorithm successfully restored a single focus within the skull cavity at a location within 1.25 mm from the true position of the narrow-band source. The results obtained from imaging single bubbles are in good agreement with numerical simulations of point source emitters and the authors' previous experimental measurements using source-based skull corrections O'Reilly et al. [IEEE Trans. Biomed. Eng. 61, 1285-1294 (2014)]. In a rat model, microbubble activity was mapped through an intact human skull at pressure levels below and above the threshold for focused ultrasound-induced blood-brain barrier opening. During bursts that led to coherent bubble activity, the location of maximum intensity in images generated with CT-based skull corrections was found to deviate by less than 1 mm, on average, from the position obtained using source-based corrections. Taken together, these results demonstrate the feasibility of using the method to guide bubble-mediated ultrasound therapies in the brain. The technique may also have application in ultrasound-based cerebral angiography.

Introduction

Purpose Other
Study Objective Experimentally validate a CT-based, noninvasive aberration-correction method for passive acoustic imaging through an intact human skull to localize acoustic sources and microbubble activity.
Animal model / Human subject Rat (Rattus norvegicus); strain: Wistar; age: not specified; sex: not specified. Also ex vivo human skullcaps (Homo sapiens, n=4); strain: N/A; age: not specified; sex: male
Disease model Healthy
MRI or image guidance method MRI

Outcomes and Safety

Summary of Outcomes CT-based skull aberration corrections restored accurate passive acoustic imaging though the human skull, producing well-focused source localization errors. In rats, the method mapped MB activity during FUS exposures at and above BBB opening thresholds.
Safety-related matter The authors mapped microbubble activity in a rat model at pressure levels below and above the threshold for focused ultrasound–induced blood–brain barrier opening; no adverse effects or safety issues are reported in the text.

Brain Region

Visualization unavailable

Ultrasound Parameters

Ultrasound instrument Sparse hemispherical receiver array (30 cm diameter), 128 piezoceramic discs (2.5 mm diameter, 612 kHz center frequency)
FUS Frequency 306 kHz
FUS Pressure 0.11–0.33 MPa
FUS Mode pulsed
Pulse duration 0.00001634 s
Duration of a single FUS session 130 s
Focal Characteristics Focal depth: 25 mm; Focal length: None; Aperture size: 30 cm (diameter)
Treatment frequency Multiple

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