Bioelectromechanical Systems Lab, Virginia Tech-Wake Forest University School of Biomedical Engineering and Sciences, 330 ICTAS Building (MC0298), Blacksburg, VA 24061, USA.
Biomed Eng Online. 2011 Nov 21;10:102. doi: 10.1186/1475-925X-10-102.
Therapeutic irreversible electroporation (IRE) is an emerging technology for the non-thermal ablation of tumors. The technique involves delivering a series of unipolar electric pulses to permanently destabilize the plasma membrane of cancer cells through an increase in transmembrane potential, which leads to the development of a tissue lesion. Clinically, IRE requires the administration of paralytic agents to prevent muscle contractions during treatment that are associated with the delivery of electric pulses. This study shows that by applying high-frequency, bipolar bursts, muscle contractions can be eliminated during IRE without compromising the non-thermal mechanism of cell death.
A combination of analytical, numerical, and experimental techniques were performed to investigate high-frequency irreversible electroporation (H-FIRE). A theoretical model for determining transmembrane potential in response to arbitrary electric fields was used to identify optimal burst frequencies and amplitudes for in vivo treatments. A finite element model for predicting thermal damage based on the electric field distribution was used to design non-thermal protocols for in vivo experiments. H-FIRE was applied to the brain of rats, and muscle contractions were quantified via accelerometers placed at the cervicothoracic junction. MRI and histological evaluation was performed post-operatively to assess ablation.
No visual or tactile evidence of muscle contraction was seen during H-FIRE at 250 kHz or 500 kHz, while all IRE protocols resulted in detectable muscle contractions at the cervicothoracic junction. H-FIRE produced ablative lesions in brain tissue that were characteristic in cellular morphology of non-thermal IRE treatments. Specifically, there was complete uniformity of tissue death within targeted areas, and a sharp transition zone was present between lesioned and normal brain.
H-FIRE is a feasible technique for non-thermal tissue ablation that eliminates muscle contractions seen in IRE treatments performed with unipolar electric pulses. Therefore, it has the potential to be performed clinically without the administration of paralytic agents.
治疗性不可逆电穿孔(IRE)是一种新兴的肿瘤非热消融技术。该技术通过增加跨膜电位,使癌细胞的质膜永久失稳,从而导致组织损伤,从而使一系列单极电脉冲。临床上,IRE 需要给予麻痹剂,以防止治疗过程中与电脉冲传递相关的肌肉收缩。本研究表明,通过施加高频双相脉冲,可以在不影响细胞死亡非热机制的情况下消除 IRE 过程中的肌肉收缩。
采用分析、数值和实验相结合的技术研究高频不可逆电穿孔(H-FIRE)。采用确定响应任意电场的跨膜电位的理论模型,确定体内治疗的最佳脉冲频率和幅度。基于电场分布预测热损伤的有限元模型用于设计体内实验的非热方案。将 H-FIRE 应用于大鼠大脑,并通过放置在颈胸交界处的加速度计来量化肌肉收缩。术后进行 MRI 和组织学评估以评估消融。
在 250 kHz 或 500 kHz 时,H-FIRE 期间未观察到肌肉收缩的视觉或触觉迹象,而所有 IRE 方案均导致颈胸交界处可检测到肌肉收缩。H-FIRE 在脑组织中产生了消融性病变,其细胞形态特征与非热 IRE 治疗一致。具体而言,在目标区域内组织死亡完全均匀,病变和正常脑之间存在明显的过渡区。
H-FIRE 是一种可行的非热组织消融技术,可消除 IRE 治疗中使用单极电脉冲引起的肌肉收缩。因此,它有可能在不给予麻痹剂的情况下在临床上进行。