| Literature DB >> 29496981 |
Anne Rix1, Wiltrud Lederle1, Benjamin Theek1, Twan Lammers1,2, Chrit Moonen3, Georg Schmitz4, Fabian Kiessling5.
Abstract
Ultrasound is among the most rapidly advancing imaging techniques. Functional methods such as elastography have been clinically introduced, and tissue characterization is improved by contrast-enhanced scans. Here, novel superresolution techniques provide unique morphologic and functional insights into tissue vascularization. Functional analyses are complemented by molecular ultrasound imaging, to visualize markers of inflammation and angiogenesis. The full potential of diagnostic ultrasound may become apparent by integrating these multiple imaging features in radiomics approaches. Emerging interest in ultrasound also results from its therapeutic potential. Various applications of tumor ablation with high-intensity focused ultrasound are being clinically evaluated, and its performance strongly benefits from the integration into MRI. Additionally, oscillating microbubbles mediate sonoporation to open biologic barriers, thus improving the delivery of drugs or nucleic acids that are coadministered or coformulated with microbubbles. This article provides an overview of recent developments in diagnostic and therapeutic ultrasound, highlighting multiple innovation tracks and their translational potential.Entities:
Keywords: HIFU; drug delivery; molecular imaging; super-resolution; ultrasound
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Year: 2018 PMID: 29496981 DOI: 10.2967/jnumed.117.200030
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Nucl Med ISSN: 0161-5505 Impact factor: 10.057