scholarly journals In VitroDemonstration of Focused Ultrasound Thrombolysis Using Bifrequency Excitation

2014 ◽  
Vol 2014 ◽  
pp. 1-10 ◽  
Author(s):  
Izella Saletes ◽  
Bruno Gilles ◽  
Vincent Auboiroux ◽  
Nadia Bendridi ◽  
Rares Salomir ◽  
...  

Focused ultrasound involving inertial cavitation has been shown to be an efficient method to induce thrombolysis without any pharmacological agent. However, further investigation of the mechanisms involved and further optimization of the process are still required. The present work aims at studying the relevance of a bifrequency excitation compared to a classical monofrequency excitation to achieve thrombolysis without any pharmacological agent.In vitrohuman blood clots were placed at the focus of a piezoelectric transducer. Efficiency of the thrombolysis was assessed by weighing each clot before and after sonication. The efficiencies of mono- (550 kHz) and bifrequency (535 and 565 kHz) excitations were compared for peak power ranging from 70 W to 220 W. The thrombolysis efficiency appears to be correlated to the inertial cavitation activity quantified by passive acoustic listening. In the conditions of the experiment, the power needed to achieve 80% of thrombolysis with a monofrequency excitation is reduced by the half with a bifrequency excitation. The thermal effects of bifrequency and monofrequency excitations, studied using MR thermometry measurements in turkey muscle samples where no cavitation occurred, did not show any difference between both types of excitations when using the same power level.

2019 ◽  
Vol 5 (1) ◽  
pp. 585-588
Author(s):  
Benedikt George ◽  
Michael Fink ◽  
Helmut Ermert ◽  
Stefan J. Rupitsch ◽  
Pia T. Hiltl ◽  
...  

AbstractAn approach to improve chemotherapy, while minimizing side effects, is a local drug release close to the tumorous tissue. For this purpose, the active drug component is often bound to nanoparticles employed as drug carriers. In the present study, we investigate sonosensitive, biocompatible poly-(L)-lactic acid (PLA) nanoparticles, which shall be used as drug carriers. For drug release, High Intensity Focused Ultrasound (HIFU) will be employed to introduce inertial cavitation, which separates the active drug component from the drug carrier. The cavitation effect generates an acoustic noise signal, which characterizes the cavitation activity and is expected to serve simultaneously as an indicator for the release of the active drug component. Depending on the ultrasound frequency, different acoustic levels of the inertial cavitation activity were measured. Investigations using a setup for passive cavitation detection (PCD) deliver quantitative results regarding the frequency dependence of the cavitation activity level of nanoparticles and reference media.


2018 ◽  
Vol 144 (3) ◽  
pp. 1824-1824 ◽  
Author(s):  
Christopher Bawiec ◽  
Christopher Hunter ◽  
Wayne Kreider ◽  
Adam D. Maxwell ◽  
Vera A. Khokhlova ◽  
...  

2015 ◽  
Vol 122 (1) ◽  
pp. 152-161 ◽  
Author(s):  
Zhiyuan Xu ◽  
Carissa Carlson ◽  
John Snell ◽  
Matt Eames ◽  
Arik Hananel ◽  
...  

OBJECT In biological tissues, it is known that the creation of gas bubbles (cavitation) during ultrasound exposure is more likely to occur at lower rather than higher frequencies. Upon collapsing, such bubbles can induce hemorrhage. Thus, acoustic inertial cavitation secondary to a 220-kHz MRI-guided focused ultrasound (MRgFUS) surgery is a serious safety issue, and animal studies are mandatory for laying the groundwork for the use of low-frequency systems in future clinical trials. The authors investigate here the in vivo potential thresholds of MRgFUS-induced inertial cavitation and MRgFUS-induced thermal coagulation using MRI, acoustic spectroscopy, and histology. METHODS Ten female piglets that had undergone a craniectomy were sonicated using a 220-kHz transcranial MRgFUS system over an acoustic energy range of 5600–14,000 J. For each piglet, a long-duration sonication (40-second duration) was performed on the right thalamus, and a short sonication (20-second duration) was performed on the left thalamus. An acoustic power range of 140–300 W was used for long-duration sonications and 300–700 W for short-duration sonications. Signals collected by 2 passive cavitation detectors were stored in memory during each sonication, and any subsequent cavitation activity was integrated within the bandwidth of the detectors. Real-time 2D MR thermometry was performed during the sonications. T1-weighted, T2-weighted, gradient-recalled echo, and diffusion-weighted imaging MRI was performed after treatment to assess the lesions. The piglets were killed immediately after the last series of posttreatment MR images were obtained. Their brains were harvested, and histological examinations were then performed to further evaluate the lesions. RESULTS Two types of lesions were induced: thermal ablation lesions, as evidenced by an acute ischemic infarction on MRI and histology, and hemorrhagic lesions, associated with inertial cavitation. Passive cavitation signals exhibited 3 main patterns identified as follows: no cavitation, stable cavitation, and inertial cavitation. Low-power and longer sonications induced only thermal lesions, with a peak temperature threshold for lesioning of 53°C. Hemorrhagic lesions occurred only with high-power and shorter sonications. The sizes of the hemorrhages measured on macroscopic histological examinations correlated with the intensity of the cavitation activity (R2 = 0.74). The acoustic cavitation activity detected by the passive cavitation detectors exhibited a threshold of 0.09 V·Hz for the occurrence of hemorrhages. CONCLUSIONS This work demonstrates that 220-kHz ultrasound is capable of inducing a thermal lesion in the brain of living swines without hemorrhage. Although the same acoustic energy can induce either a hemorrhage or a thermal lesion, it seems that low-power, long-duration sonication is less likely to cause hemorrhage and may be safer. Although further study is needed to decrease the likelihood of ischemic infarction associated with the 220-kHz ultrasound, the threshold established in this work may allow for the detection and prevention of deleterious cavitations.


2013 ◽  
Vol 34 (5) ◽  
pp. E14 ◽  
Author(s):  
Stephen J. Monteith ◽  
Neal F. Kassell ◽  
Oded Goren ◽  
Sagi Harnof

Intracerebral hemorrhage remains a significant cause of morbidity and mortality. Current surgical therapies aim to use a minimally invasive approach to remove as much of the clot as possible without causing undue disruption to surrounding neural structures. Transcranial MR-guided focused ultrasound (MRgFUS) surgery is an emerging technology that permits a highly concentrated focal point of ultrasound energy to be deposited to a target deep within the brain without an incision or craniotomy. With appropriate ultrasound parameters it has been shown that MRgFUS can effectively liquefy large-volume blood clots through the human calvaria. In this review the authors discuss the rationale for using MRgFUS to noninvasively liquefy intracerebral hemorrhage (ICH), thereby permitting minimally invasive aspiration of the liquefied clot via a small drainage tube. The mechanism of action of MRgFUS sonothrombolysis; current investigational work with in vitro, in vivo, and cadaveric models of ICH; and the potential clinical application of this disruptive technology for the treatment of ICH are discussed.


Author(s):  
Jingsen Ma ◽  
Aswin Gnanaskandan ◽  
Chao-Tsung Hsiao ◽  
Georges L. Chahine

Abstract Microbubble enhanced High Intensity Focused Ultrasound (HIFU) is of great interest to tissue ablation for tumor treatment such as in liver and brain cancers, where microbubbles are injected to the targeted region to promote focal heating while reducing pre-focal damage. To accurately characterize the acoustic and thermal fields during this process, a compressible Euler-Lagrange model is used, and a domain decomposition based MPI parallelization scheme is developed for its speedup. The Eulerian computational domain is subdivided into several subdomains, and the Lagrangian bubbles are subdivided based on their locations corresponding to each subdomain. During each time step, MPI processors, each handling one subdomain, are sequentially used to execute 1) the fluid, and 2) bubble computations, 3) followed by the coupling which maps the void fraction from Lagrangian bubbles into Eulerian grids. Steps 1) and 2) are relatively straightforward by routinely following regular MPI procedures. However, step 3) becomes challenging as a bubble near borders needs to spread its effects to cells in different subdomains. This is addressed by a special utilization of ghost cells surrounding each fluid subdomain, which allows bubbles to spread their void effects across subdomain edges without the need of directly exchanging bubble information between subdomains and significantly increasing overhead. This is verified by gas volume conservation before and after spreading the bubble effects. Bubbles' thermal effects are handled in a similar way. This parallelization scheme is validated and illustrated on a typical microbubble enhanced HIFU problem, followed by parallelization scaling tests and efficiency analysis.


2016 ◽  
Vol 140 (4) ◽  
pp. 2983-2983
Author(s):  
Tatiana Khokhlova ◽  
Christopher Hunter ◽  
Wayne Kreider ◽  
Adam Maxwell ◽  
Vera Khokhlova ◽  
...  

Nanomedicine ◽  
2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Megan Grundy ◽  
Luca Bau ◽  
Claudia Hill ◽  
Catherine Paverd ◽  
Christophoros Mannaris ◽  
...  

Aims: Testing ultrasound-mediated cavitation for enhanced delivery of the therapeutic antibody cetuximab to tumors in a mouse model. Methods: Tumors with strong EGF receptor expression were grown bilaterally. Cetuximab was coadministered intravenously with cavitation nuclei, consisting of either the ultrasound contrast agent Sonovue or gas-stabilizing nanoscale SonoTran Particles. One of the two tumors was exposed to focused ultrasound. Passive acoustic mapping localized and monitored cavitation activity. Both tumors were then excised and cetuximab concentration was quantified. Results: Cavitation increased tumoral cetuximab concentration. When nucleated by Sonovue, a 2.1-fold increase (95% CI 1.3- to 3.4-fold) was measured, whereas SonoTran Particles gave a 3.6-fold increase (95% CI 2.3- to 5.8-fold). Conclusions: Ultrasound-mediated cavitation, especially when nucleated by nanoscale gas-entrapping particles, can noninvasively increase site-specific delivery of therapeutic antibodies to solid tumors.


Author(s):  
S.K. Aggarwal

The proposed primary mechanism of action of the anticancer drug cisplatin (Cis-DDP) is through its interaction with DNA, mostly through DNA intrastrand cross-links or DNA interstrand cross-links. DNA repair mechanisms can circumvent this arrest thus permitting replication and transcription to proceed. Various membrane transport enzymes have also been demonstrated to be effected by cisplatin. Glycoprotein alkaline phosphatase was looked at in the proximal tubule cells before and after cisplatin both in vivo and in vitro for its inactivation or its removal from the membrane using light and electron microscopy.Outbred male Swiss Webster (Crl: (WI) BR) rats weighing 150-250g were given ip injections of cisplatin (7mg/kg). Animals were killed on day 3 and day 5. Thick slices (20-50.um) of kidney tissue from treated and untreated animals were fixed in 1% buffered glutaraldehyde and 1% formaldehyde (0.05 M cacodylate buffer, pH 7.3) for 30 min at 4°C. Alkaline phosphatase activity and carbohydrates were demonstrated according to methods described earlier.


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