| Literature DB >> 26929821 |
Robert H Bonow1, John R Silber1, Dieter R Enzmann2, Norman J Beauchamp3, Richard G Ellenbogen1, Pierre D Mourad4.
Abstract
Cerebral vasospasm is a major cause of morbidity and mortality in patients with subarachnoid hemorrhage (SAH), causing delayed neurological deficits in as many as one third of cases. Existing therapy targets induction of cerebral vasodilation through use of various drugs and mechanical means, with a range of observed efficacy. Here, we perform a literature review supporting our hypothesis that transcranially delivered ultrasound may have the ability to induce therapeutic cerebral vasodilation and, thus, may one day be used therapeutically in the context of SAH. Prior studies demonstrate that ultrasound can induce vasodilation in both normal and vasoconstricted blood vessels in peripheral tissues, leading to reduced ischemia and cell damage. Among the proposed mechanisms is alteration of several nitric oxide (NO) pathways, where NO is a known vasodilator. While in vivo studies do not point to a specific physical mechanism, results of in vitro studies favor cavitation induction by ultrasound, where the associated shear stresses likely induce NO production. Two papers discussed the effects of ultrasound on the cerebral vasculature. One study applied clinical transcranial Doppler ultrasound to a rodent complete middle cerebral artery occlusion model and found reduced infarct size. A second involved the application of pulsed ultrasound in vitro to murine brain endothelial cells and showed production of a variety of vasodilatory chemicals, including by-products of arachidonic acid metabolism. In sum, nine reviewed studies demonstrated evidence of either cerebrovascular dilation or elaboration of vasodilatory compounds. Of particular interest, all of the reviewed studies used ultrasound capable of transcranial application: pulsed ultrasound, with carrier frequencies ranging between 0.5 and 2.0 MHz, and intensities not substantially above FDA-approved intensity values. We close by discussing potential specific treatment paradigms of SAH and other cerebral ischemic disorders based on MRI-guided transcranial ultrasound.Entities:
Keywords: Brain; Cerebral vasospasm; Subarachnoid hemorrhage; Therapeutic ultrasound; Vasoconstriction
Year: 2016 PMID: 26929821 PMCID: PMC4770693 DOI: 10.1186/s40349-016-0050-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Ther Ultrasound ISSN: 2050-5736
Published literature regarding ultrasound-mediated vasodilation
| Article | Model | US parameters | Results |
|---|---|---|---|
| Hightower and Intaglietta 2009 [ | In vivo | • 2.5 MHz, continuous wave | • Microcirculation transiently decreased at 0.5 h but increased at 24 h |
| Miyamoto et al. 2003 [ | In vivo | • 27 kHz | • 9 % increase in the luminal area after 30 s of US, 19 % increase after 3 min |
| Alexandrov et al. 2011 [ | In vivo | • 2 MHz | • Decrease in cerebral edema and infarction volume at 0.010 W/cm2
|
| Suguta et al. 2000 [ | In vivo | • 490 kHz, continuous wave | • NO production increased by 20 % |
| Suchkova et al. 2002 [ | In vivo | • 40 kHz | • Tissue perfusion improves over 60-min US application |
| Altlad et al. 2004 [ | In vitro | • 27 kHz | • Significant increase in NO elaboration and eNOS activity |
| Iida et al. 2006 [ | In vivo | • 29 kHz | • Artery diameter increased after 2 min of US |
| Hsu & Huang 2004 [ | In vitro | • 1 MHz 25 % pulsed | • Increased extracellular matrix production in response to US |
| Davis et al. 2015 [ | In vitro | • 1.05 MHz | • Increased production of various vasodilator molecules (e.g., adenosine, metabolites of arachidonic acid) in response to US |
HUVEC human umbilical vein endothelial cells, BAEC bovine aortic endothelial cells, MCA middle cerebral artery, US ultrasound, SATA spatial average-temporal average, SPTA spatial peak-temporal average, ISATA spatial average-temporal average intensity