Ultrasound and Optical Imaging Laboratory, Department of Bioengineering, The University of Texas at Arlington, Arlington, TX 76019, United States of America.
Joint Biomedical Engineering Program, The University of Texas at Arlington and The University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center at Dallas, Dallas TX 75390, United States of America.
Phys Med Biol. 2022 Aug 31;67(17). doi: 10.1088/1361-6560/ac88b5.
This study aims to theoretically investigate the dynamics of ultrasound-induced interstitial fluid streaming and tissue recovery after ultrasound exposure for potentially accelerating nanoagent transport and controlling its distribution in tissue.Starting from fundamental equations, the dynamics of ultrasound-induced interstitial fluid streaming and tissue relaxation after an ultrasound exposure were modeled, derived and simulated. Also, both ultrasound-induced mechanical and thermal effects were considered in the models.The proposed new mechanism was named squeezing interstitial fluid via transfer of ultrasound momentum (SIF-TUM). It means that an ultrasound beam can squeeze the tissue in a small focal volume from all the directions, and generate a macroscopic streaming of interstitial fluid and a compression of tissue solid matrix. After the ultrasound is turned off, the solid matrix will recover and can generate a backflow. Rather than the ultrasound pressure itself or intensity, the streaming velocity is determined by the dot product of the ultrasound pressure gradient and its conjugate. Tissue and nanoagent properties also affect the streaming and recovery velocities.The mobility of therapeutic or diagnostic agents, such as drugs, drug carriers, or imaging contrast agents, in the interstitial space of many diseased tissues, such as tumors, is usually extremely low because of the inefficiency of the natural transport mechanisms. Therefore, the interstitial space is one of the major barriers hindering agent deliveries. The ability to externally accelerate agent transport and control its distribution is highly desirable. Potentially, SIF-TUM can be a powerful technology to accelerate agent transport in deep tissue and control the distribution if appropriate parameters are selected.
本研究旨在从理论上研究超声辐射后间质液流动和组织恢复的动力学,以期加速纳米制剂的转运并控制其在组织中的分布。
从基本方程出发,对超声辐照后间质液流动和组织弛豫的动力学进行了建模、推导和模拟。同时,在模型中考虑了超声的机械和热效应。
所提出的新机制被命名为通过传递超声动量挤压间质液(Squeezing Interstitial Fluid via Transfer of Ultrasound Momentum,SIF-TUM)。这意味着超声束可以从各个方向挤压小焦域内的组织,产生间质液的宏观流动和组织固体基质的压缩。当超声关闭后,固体基质会恢复并产生回流。而不是超声压力本身或强度,流场速度取决于超声压力梯度与其共轭的点积。组织和纳米制剂的特性也会影响流场和恢复速度。
在许多疾病组织(如肿瘤)的间质空间中,治疗或诊断制剂(如药物、药物载体或成像对比剂)的迁移率通常非常低,因为天然转运机制效率低下。因此,间质空间是阻碍制剂输送的主要障碍之一。外部加速制剂转运并控制其分布的能力是非常理想的。如果选择适当的参数,SIF-TUM 可能成为一种在深部组织中加速制剂转运和控制分布的强大技术。