Physical Science Platform, Sunnybrook Research Institute, Toronto, ON, Canada M4N 3M5.
Radiology. 2012 Apr;263(1):96-106. doi: 10.1148/radiol.11111417. Epub 2012 Feb 13.
To determine if focused ultrasound disruption of the blood-brain barrier (BBB) can be safely controlled by using real-time modulation of treatment pressures on the basis of acoustic emissions from the exposed microbubbles.
All experiments were performed with the approval of the institutional animal care committee. Transcranial focused ultrasound (551.5 kHz, 10-msec bursts, 2-Hz pulse repetition frequency, 2 minute sonication) in conjunction with circulating microbubbles was applied in 86 locations in 27 rats to disrupt the BBB. Acoustic emissions captured during each burst by using a wideband polyvinylidene fluoride hydrophone were analyzed for spectral content and used to adjust treatment pressures. Pressures were increased incrementally after each burst until ultraharmonic emissions were detected, at which point the pressure was reduced to a percentage of the pressure required to induce the ultraharmonics and was maintained for the remainder of the sonication. Disruption was evaluated at contrast material-enhanced T1-weighted magnetic resonance (MR) imaging. Mean enhancement was calculated by averaging the signal intensity at the focus over a 3 × 3-pixel region of interest and comparing it with that in nonsonicated tissue. Histologic analysis was performed to determine the extent of damage to the tissue. Statistical analysis was performed by using Student t tests.
For sonications resulting in BBB disruption, the mean peak pressure was 0.28 MPa ± 0.05 (standard deviation) (range, 0.18-0.40 MPa). By using the control algorithm, a linear relationship was found between the scaling level and the mean enhancement on T1-weighted MR images after contrast agent injection. At a 50% scaling level, mean enhancement of 19.6% ± 1.7 (standard error of the mean) was achieved without inducing damage. At higher scaling levels, histologic analysis revealed gross tissue damage, while at a 50% scaling level, no damage was observed at high-field-strength MR imaging or histologic examination 8 days after treatment.
This study demonstrates that acoustic emissions can be used to actively control focused ultrasound exposures for the safe induction of BBB disruption.
基于暴露微泡的声发射,确定是否可以通过实时调制治疗压力来安全控制聚焦超声对血脑屏障(BBB)的破坏。
所有实验均获得机构动物护理委员会的批准。在 27 只大鼠的 86 个部位应用经颅聚焦超声(551.5 kHz,10 毫秒爆发,2 Hz 脉冲重复频率,2 分钟超声)联合循环微泡,以破坏 BBB。在每个爆发期间,使用宽带聚偏二氟乙烯水听器捕获声发射,并对其光谱内容进行分析,以调整治疗压力。在每次爆发后,压力逐渐增加,直到检测到超谐波发射,此时压力降低到产生超谐波所需压力的百分比,并在其余超声期间保持该压力。通过对比增强 T1 加权磁共振(MR)成像评估破坏情况。通过在焦点上的 3×3 像素感兴趣区域内平均信号强度并将其与未超声组织进行比较,计算平均增强。进行组织学分析以确定组织损伤的程度。通过使用学生 t 检验进行统计分析。
对于导致 BBB 破坏的超声,平均峰值压力为 0.28 MPa±0.05(标准差)(范围,0.18-0.40 MPa)。通过使用控制算法,在对比剂注射后 T1 加权 MR 图像上,发现缩放级别与平均增强之间存在线性关系。在 50%的缩放级别下,在不引起损伤的情况下实现了 19.6%±1.7(平均值的标准误差)的平均增强。在更高的缩放级别下,组织学分析显示出明显的组织损伤,而在 50%的缩放级别下,在治疗后 8 天的高场强 MR 成像或组织学检查中未观察到损伤。
本研究表明,可以使用声发射来主动控制聚焦超声照射,以安全诱导 BBB 破坏。