| Literature DB >> 25512865 |
Matthew Dc Eames1, Arik Hananel2, John W Snell3, Neal F Kassell3, Jean-Francois Aubry4.
Abstract
In preparing a patient for a trans-cranial magnetic resonance (MR)-guided focused ultrasound procedure, current practice is to shave the patient's head on treatment day. Here we present an initial attempt to evaluate the feasibility of trans-cranial focused ultrasound in an unshaved, ex vivo human head model. A human skull filled with tissue-mimicking phantom and covered with a wig made of human hair was sonicated using 220- and 710-kHz head transducers to evaluate the feasibility of acoustic energy transfer. Heating at the focal point was measured by MR proton resonance shift thermometry. Results showed that the hair had a negligible effect on focal spot thermal rise at 220 kHz and a 17% drop in temperature elevation when using 710 kHz.Entities:
Keywords: Brain; Hair; MR thermometry; tcMRgFUS
Year: 2014 PMID: 25512865 PMCID: PMC4265964 DOI: 10.1186/2050-5736-1-24
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Ther Ultrasound ISSN: 2050-5736
Figure 1Degassing of the cadaver skull, filling with tissue-mimicking phantom, and setting for placement inside the ExAblate-Neuro.
Figure 2Bare skull strapped to holder ( ) and as seen on MR T2w sagittal image ( ).
Figure 3Skull with wig strapped to holder ( ) and as seen on MR T2w sagittal image ( ).
Figure 4Skull with wig cap strapped to holder ( ) and as seen on MR T2w sagittal image ( ).
Figure 5Temperature elevation as a function of energy. Measured heating using 220 kHz (left) and 710 kHz (right) in bare (blue), cap (green), and wig (red) skull setups. Standard deviation is displayed as error bars.
Slope of the linear least squares fit for each configuration
| No wig and no cap | 1.1 × 10-3 | 1.9 × 10-3 |
| Cap alone | 0.88 × 10-3 | 1.1 × 10-3 |
| Cap and wig | 0.89 × 10-3 | 0.91 × 10-3 |
Figure 6Wig to cap thermal rise ratio using 220 and 710 kHz.