| Literature DB >> 33435152 |
Giuseppe Roberto Giammalva1, Cesare Gagliardo2, Salvatore Marrone1, Federica Paolini1, Rosa Maria Gerardi1, Giuseppe Emmanuele Umana3, Kaan Yağmurlu4, Bipin Chaurasia5, Gianluca Scalia6, Federico Midiri2, Ludovico La Grutta7, Luigi Basile1, Carlo Gulì1, Domenico Messina1, Maria Angela Pino1, Francesca Graziano6, Silvana Tumbiolo8, Domenico Gerardo Iacopino1, Rosario Maugeri1.
Abstract
Transcranial MR-guided Focused ultrasound (tcMRgFUS) is a surgical procedure that adopts focused ultrasounds beam towards a specific therapeutic target through the intact skull. The convergence of focused ultrasound beams onto the target produces tissue effects through released energy. Regarding neurosurgical applications, tcMRgFUS has been successfully adopted as a non-invasive procedure for ablative purposes such as thalamotomy, pallidotomy, and subthalamotomy for movement disorders. Several studies confirmed the effectiveness of tcMRgFUS in the treatment of several neurological conditions, ranging from motor disorders to psychiatric disorders. Moreover, using low-frequencies tcMRgFUS systems temporarily disrupts the blood-brain barrier, making this procedure suitable in neuro-oncology and neurodegenerative disease for controlled drug delivery. Nowadays, tcMRgFUS represents one of the most promising and fascinating technologies in neuroscience. Since it is an emerging technology, tcMRgFUS is still the subject of countless disparate studies, even if its effectiveness has been already proven in many experimental and therapeutic fields. Therefore, although many studies have been carried out, many others are still needed to increase the degree of knowledge of the innumerable potentials of tcMRgFUS and thus expand the future fields of application of this technology.Entities:
Keywords: HIFU; LIFU; blood-brain barrier; epilepsy; focused ultrasound; neuro-oncology; neurodegenerative diseases; psychiatric disorders; tcMRgFUS
Year: 2021 PMID: 33435152 PMCID: PMC7827488 DOI: 10.3390/brainsci11010084
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Brain Sci ISSN: 2076-3425