Novák P, Moros E G, Parry J J, Rogers B E, Myerson R J, Zeug A, Locke J E, Rossin R, Straube W L, Singh A K
Department of Radiation Oncology, Washington University School of Medicine, 4511 Forest Park Ave., Suite 200, St Louis, MO 63108, USA.
Phys Med Biol. 2005 Nov 7;50(21):5127-39. doi: 10.1088/0031-9155/50/21/012. Epub 2005 Oct 19.
An external local ultrasound (US) system was developed to induce controlled hyperthermia of subcutaneously implanted tumours in small animals (e.g., mice and rats). It was designed to be compatible with a small animal positron emission tomography scanner (microPET) to facilitate studies of hyperthermia-induced tumour re-oxygenation using a PET radiopharmaceutical, but it is applicable for any small animal study requiring controlled heating. The system consists of an acrylic applicator bed with up to four independent 5 MHz planar disc US transducers of 1 cm in diameter, a four-channel radiofrequency (RF) generator, a multiple thermocouple thermometry unit, and a personal computer with custom monitoring and controlling software. Although the system presented here was developed to target tumours of up to 1 cm in diameter, the applicator design allows for different piezoelectric transducers to be exchanged and operated within the 3.5-6.5 MHz band to target different tumour sizes. Temperature feedback control software was developed on the basis of a proportional-integral-derivative (PID) approach when the measured temperatures were within a selectable temperature band about the target temperature. Outside this band, an on/off control action was applied. Perfused tissue-mimicking phantom experiments were performed to determine optimum controller gain constants, which were later employed successfully in animal experiments. The performance of the SAHUS (small animal hyperthermia ultrasound system) was tested using several tumour types grown in thighs of female nude (nu/nu) mice. To date, the system has successfully treated 83 tumours to target temperatures in the range of 41-43 degrees C for periods of 65 min on average.
开发了一种外部局部超声(US)系统,用于在小动物(如小鼠和大鼠)中诱导皮下植入肿瘤的可控热疗。该系统设计为与小动物正电子发射断层扫描仪(microPET)兼容,以便利用PET放射性药物促进热疗诱导肿瘤再氧合的研究,但它适用于任何需要可控加热的小动物研究。该系统由一个丙烯酸涂抹床组成,床内有多达四个独立的直径为1厘米的5兆赫平面圆盘超声换能器、一个四通道射频(RF)发生器、一个多热电偶测温单元以及一台装有定制监测和控制软件的个人计算机。尽管此处介绍的系统是为直径达1厘米的肿瘤设计的,但涂抹器设计允许更换不同的压电换能器,并在3.5 - 6.5兆赫频段内操作,以针对不同大小的肿瘤。当测量温度在目标温度附近的可选温度范围内时,基于比例积分微分(PID)方法开发了温度反馈控制软件。在此范围之外,则应用开/关控制动作。进行了灌注组织模拟体模实验以确定最佳控制器增益常数,这些常数后来在动物实验中成功应用。使用在雌性裸(nu/nu)鼠大腿上生长的几种肿瘤类型对小动物热疗超声系统(SAHUS)的性能进行了测试。迄今为止,该系统已成功治疗了83个肿瘤,平均将目标温度维持在41 - 43摄氏度范围内65分钟。