Mathematical Model of Ultrasound Attenuation With Skull Thickness for Transcranial-Focused Ultrasound.
Authors: Guo J, Song X, Chen X, Xu M, Ming D
Transcranial-focused ultrasound (tFUS) has potential for both neuromodulation and neuroimaging. Due to the influence of head tissue, especially the skull, its attenuation is a key issue affecting precise focusing. The objective of the present study was to construct a mathematical model of ultrasound attenuation inclusive of skull thickness. First, combined with real skull phantom experiments and simulation experiments, tFUS attenuation of different head tissues was investigated. Furthermore, based on the system identification method, a mathematical model of ultrasound attenuation was constructed taking skull thickness into account. Finally, the performance of the mathematical model was tested, and its potential applications were investigated. For different head tissues, including scalp, skull, and brain tissue, the skull was found to be the biggest influencing factor for ultrasound attenuation, the attenuation caused by it being 4.70 times and 7.06 times that of attenuation caused by the brain and scalp, respectively. Consistent with the results of both the simulation and phantom experiments, the attenuation of the mathematical model increased as the skull thickness increased. The average error of the mathematical model was 1.87% in the phantom experiment. In addition, the experimental results show that the devised mathematical model is suitable for different initial pressures and different skulls with correlation coefficients higher than 0.99. Both simulation and phantom experiments validated the effectiveness of the proposed mathematical model. It can be concluded from this experiment that the proposed mathematical model can accurately calculate the tFUS attenuation and can significantly contribute to further research and application of tFUS.
Introduction
Purpose
Transcranial ultrasound stimulation
Study Objective
To develop and validate a mathematical model of transcranial-focused ultrasound attenuation that accounts for skull thickness.
Animal model / Human subject
None (Two human skull)
Outcomes and Safety
Summary of Outcomes
Transcranial focused ultrasound (tFUS) is strongly attenuated by the skull—the skull produced ~83–85% attenuation (4.70× and 7.06× greater than brain and scalp) and attenuation increased with skull thickness. A mathematical model accurately predicted attenuation across tested initial peak pressures (0.862, 1.931, 2.138, 2.276 MPa), multiple skulls and skull thicknesses (3.5–8 mm), with average error ~1.87% and correlation coefficients >0.99.
Safety-related matter
No safety issues, adverse effects, or tissue damage were reported or discussed in the paper; the study focused on modeling and validating tFUS attenuation in simulations and skull/phantom experiments. No in vivo or clinical safety assessment was performed or mentioned.
Brain Region
Ultrasound Parameters
Ultrasound instrument
Single element bowl shaped focused ultrasound transducer (Olympus A392S)
FUS Pressure
0.862-2.276 Mpa
Focal Characteristics
Focal depth: None, Focal length: None, Aperture size: None
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