Literature DB >> 29385925

Predicting lesion size during focused ultrasound thalamotomy: a review of 63 lesions over 3 clinical trials.

Aaron E Bond1, W Jeffrey Elias1.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVE The goal of this study was to improve the predictability of lesion size during focused ultrasound (FUS) thalamotomy procedures. METHODS Treatment profiles and T2-weighted MRI (T2 MRI) studies obtained in 63 patients who participated in 3 clinical trials of FUS thalamotomy from February 2011 to March 2015 were reviewed retrospectively. Four damage estimate models were compared with lesion sizes measured on postprocedural T2 MRI. Models were based on 54°C × 3 seconds, 240 cumulative equivalent minutes at 43°C, and simple thermal threshold analysis, which recorded the maximum diameter that reached a temperature of at least 51°C and 54°C. Energy requirements per °C thermal rise above 37°C were also recorded. RESULTS Lesion diameters from T2 MRI correlated poorly from the day of the procedure to day 1 postprocedure (mean increase 78% [SD 79%]). There was more predictability of lesion size from day 1 to day 30, with a mean reduction in lesion diameter of 11% (SD 24%). Of the 4 models tested, the most correlative model to day 1 findings on T2 MRI was a 51°C threshold. The authors observed an increase in the energy requirement for each subsequent treatment sonication, with the largest percentage increase from treatment sonication 1 to treatment sonication 2 (mean increase 20% in energy required per °C increase in temperature above 37°C). CONCLUSIONS At the margins, 51°C temperature threshold diameters correlated best to lesion diameters measured at day 1 with T2 MRI. The lesion size from T2 MRI decreases from day 1 to day 30 in a predictable manner, much more so than from the day of the procedure to day 1 postprocedure. Energy requirements per °C rise above 37°C continuously increase with each successive sonication.

Entities:  

Keywords:  AC-PC = anterior commissure–posterior commissure; AP = anteroposterior; CEM = cumulative equivalent minutes; ET = essential tremor; FUS = focused ultrasound; RCT = randomized controlled trial; SDR = skull density ratio; focused ultrasound; thalamotomy; thermal dose; tremor

Mesh:

Year:  2018        PMID: 29385925     DOI: 10.3171/2017.11.FOCUS17623

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Neurosurg Focus        ISSN: 1092-0684            Impact factor:   4.047


  4 in total

1.  Accumulated thermal dose in MRI-guided focused ultrasound for essential tremor: repeated sonications with low focal temperatures.

Authors:  Ryan M Jones; Shona Kamps; Yuexi Huang; Nadia Scantlebury; Nir Lipsman; Michael L Schwartz; Kullervo Hynynen
Journal:  J Neurosurg       Date:  2019-05-10       Impact factor: 5.115

2.  MRI-based thermal dosimetry based on single-slice imaging during focused ultrasound thalamotomy.

Authors:  Nathan McDannold; P Jason White; G Rees Cosgrove
Journal:  Phys Med Biol       Date:  2020-11-28       Impact factor: 3.609

3.  A preclinical study of diffusion-weighted MRI contrast as an early indicator of thermal ablation.

Authors:  Steven P Allen; Francesco Prada; Zhiyuan Xu; Jeremy Gatesman; Xue Feng; Helen Sporkin; Yekaterina Gilbo; Sydney DeCleene; Kim Butts Pauly; Craig H Meyer
Journal:  Magn Reson Med       Date:  2020-11-11       Impact factor: 3.737

4.  Focused Ultrasound in Neuroscience. State of the Art and Future Perspectives.

Authors:  Giuseppe Roberto Giammalva; Cesare Gagliardo; Salvatore Marrone; Federica Paolini; Rosa Maria Gerardi; Giuseppe Emmanuele Umana; Kaan Yağmurlu; Bipin Chaurasia; Gianluca Scalia; Federico Midiri; Ludovico La Grutta; Luigi Basile; Carlo Gulì; Domenico Messina; Maria Angela Pino; Francesca Graziano; Silvana Tumbiolo; Domenico Gerardo Iacopino; Rosario Maugeri
Journal:  Brain Sci       Date:  2021-01-10
  4 in total

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