O'Brien William D
Bioacoustics Research Laboratory, Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering, University of Illinois, 405 N. Mathews, Urbana, IL 61801, USA.
Prog Biophys Mol Biol. 2007 Jan-Apr;93(1-3):212-55. doi: 10.1016/j.pbiomolbio.2006.07.010. Epub 2006 Aug 8.
Ultrasonic biophysics is the study of mechanisms responsible for how ultrasound and biological materials interact. Ultrasound-induced bioeffect or risk studies focus on issues related to the effects of ultrasound on biological materials. On the other hand, when biological materials affect the ultrasonic wave, this can be viewed as the basis for diagnostic ultrasound. Thus, an understanding of the interaction of ultrasound with tissue provides the scientific basis for image production and risk assessment. Relative to the bioeffect or risk studies, that is, the biophysical mechanisms by which ultrasound affects biological materials, ultrasound-induced bioeffects are generally separated into thermal and non-thermal mechanisms. Ultrasonic dosimetry is concerned with the quantitative determination of ultrasonic energy interaction with biological materials. Whenever ultrasonic energy is propagated into an attenuating material such as tissue, the amplitude of the wave decreases with distance. This attenuation is due to either absorption or scattering. Absorption is a mechanism that represents that portion of ultrasonic wave that is converted into heat, and scattering can be thought of as that portion of the wave, which changes direction. Because the medium can absorb energy to produce heat, a temperature rise may occur as long as the rate of heat production is greater than the rate of heat removal. Current interest with thermally mediated ultrasound-induced bioeffects has focused on the thermal isoeffect concept. The non-thermal mechanism that has received the most attention is acoustically generated cavitation wherein ultrasonic energy by cavitation bubbles is concentrated. Acoustic cavitation, in a broad sense, refers to ultrasonically induced bubble activity occurring in a biological material that contains pre-existing gaseous inclusions. Cavitation-related mechanisms include radiation force, microstreaming, shock waves, free radicals, microjets and strain. It is more challenging to deduce the causes of mechanical effects in tissues that do not contain gas bodies. These ultrasonic biophysics mechanisms will be discussed in the context of diagnostic ultrasound exposure risk concerns.
超声生物物理学是研究超声与生物材料相互作用机制的学科。超声诱导的生物效应或风险研究聚焦于超声对生物材料影响的相关问题。另一方面,当生物材料影响超声波时,这可被视为诊断超声的基础。因此,了解超声与组织的相互作用为图像生成和风险评估提供了科学依据。相对于生物效应或风险研究,即超声影响生物材料的生物物理机制而言,超声诱导的生物效应通常分为热机制和非热机制。超声剂量学关注超声能量与生物材料相互作用的定量测定。每当超声能量传播到诸如组织等衰减材料中时,波的振幅会随距离减小。这种衰减是由于吸收或散射。吸收是一种将超声波的一部分转化为热量的机制,而散射可被认为是波改变方向的那部分。由于介质可吸收能量产生热量,只要产热速率大于散热速率,就可能会出现温度升高。目前对热介导的超声诱导生物效应的关注集中在热等效效应概念上。受到最多关注的非热机制是声致空化,其中空化气泡会集中超声能量。广义而言,声空化是指在含有预先存在气态夹杂物的生物材料中发生的超声诱导气泡活动。与空化相关的机制包括辐射力、微流、冲击波、自由基、微射流和应变。推断不含气体的组织中机械效应的原因更具挑战性。这些超声生物物理机制将在诊断超声暴露风险问题的背景下进行讨论。