Literature DB >> 18975674

Prevention of post-focal thermal damage by formation of bubbles at the focus during high intensity focused ultrasound therapy.

Vesna Zderic1, Jessica Foley, Wenbo Luo, Shahram Vaezy.   

Abstract

Safety concerns exist for potential thermal damage at tissue-air or tissue-bone interfaces located in the post-focal region during high intensity focused ultrasound (HIFU) treatments. We tested the feasibility of reducing thermal energy deposited at the post-focal tissue-air interfaces by producing bubbles (due to acoustic cavitation and/or boiling) at the HIFU focus. HIFU (in-situ intensities of 460-3500 W/cm2, frequencies of 3.2-5.5 MHz) was applied for 30 s to produce lesions (in turkey breast in-vitro (n = 37), and rabbit liver (n = 4) and thigh muscle in-vivo (n = 11)). Tissue temperature was measured at the tissue-air interface using a thermal (infrared) camera. Ultrasound imaging was used to detect bubbles at the HIFU focus, appearing as a hyperechoic region. In-vitro results showed that when no bubbles were present at the focus (at lower intensities of 460-850 W/cm2), the temperature at the interface increased continuously, up to 7.3 +/- 4.0 degrees C above the baseline by the end of treatment. When bubbles formed immediately after the start of HIFU treatment (at the high intensity of 3360 W/cm2), the temperature increased briefly for 3.5 s to 7.4 +/- 3.6 degrees C above the baseline temperature and then decreased to 4.0 +/- 1.4 degrees C above the baseline by the end of treatment. Similar results were obtained in in-vivo experiments with the temperature increases (above the baseline temperature) at the muscle-air and liver-air interfaces at the end of the high intensity treatment lower by 7.1 degrees C and 6.0 degrees C, respectively, as compared to the low intensity treatment. Thermal effects of HIFU at post-focal tissue-air interfaces, such as in bowels, could result in clinically significant increases in temperature. Bubble formation at the HIFU focus may provide a method for shielding the post-focal region from potential thermal damage.

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Year:  2008        PMID: 18975674      PMCID: PMC2673593          DOI: 10.1118/1.2975149

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Med Phys        ISSN: 0094-2405            Impact factor:   4.071


  43 in total

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7.  Safety limitations of MR-HIFU treatment near interfaces: a phantom validation.

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9.  Perfluorohexane-encapsulated fullerene nanospheres for dual-modality US/CT imaging and synergistic high-intensity focused ultrasound ablation.

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  9 in total

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