Literature DB >> 33836508

The impact of CT image parameters and skull heterogeneity modeling on the accuracy of transcranial focused ultrasound simulations.

Hazael Montanaro1,2,3,4, Cristina Pasquinelli5,6,4, Hyunjoo J Lee7, Hyunggug Kim7, Hartwig R Siebner5,8,9, Niels Kuster1,2, Axel Thielscher5,6, Esra Neufeld1,2.   

Abstract

Objective. Low-intensity transcranial ultrasound stimulation (TUS) is a promising non-invasive brain stimulation (NIBS) technique. TUS can reach deeper areas and target smaller regions in the brain than other NIBS techniques, but its application in humans is hampered by the lack of a straightforward and reliable procedure to predict the induced ultrasound exposure. Here, we examined how skull modeling affects computer simulations of TUS.Approach. We characterized the ultrasonic beam after transmission through a sheep skull with a hydrophone and performed computed tomography (CT) image-based simulations of the experimental setup. To study the skull model's impact, we varied: CT acquisition parameters (tube voltage, dose, filter sharpness), image interpolation, segmentation parameters, acoustic property maps (speed-of-sound, density, attenuation), and transducer-position mismatches. We compared the impact of modeling parameter changes on model predictions and on measurement agreement. Spatial-peak intensity and location, total power, and the Gamma metric (a measure for distribution differences) were used as quantitative criteria. Modeling-based sensitivity analysis was also performed for two human head models.Main results. Sheep skull attenuation assignment and transducer positioning had the most important impact on spatial peak intensity (overestimation up to 300%, respectively 30%), followed by filter sharpness and tube voltage (up to 20%), requiring calibration of the mapping functions. Positioning and skull-heterogeneity-structure strongly affected the intensity distribution (gamma tolerances exceeded in>80%, respectively>150%, of the focus-volume in water), necessitating image-based personalized modeling. Simulation results in human models consistently demonstrate a high sensitivity to the skull-heterogeneity model, attenuation tuning, and transducer shifts, the magnitude of which depends on the underlying skull structure complexity.Significance. Our study reveals the importance of properly modeling the skull-heterogeneity and its structure and of accurately reproducing the transducer position. The results raise red flags when translating modeling approaches among clinical sites without proper standardization and/or recalibration of the imaging and modeling parameters.
© 2021 IOP Publishing Ltd.

Entities:  

Keywords:  computational dosimetry; image-based modeling; sensitivity analysis; skull modeling; transcranial focused ultrasound stimulation; treatment planning

Year:  2021        PMID: 33836508     DOI: 10.1088/1741-2552/abf68d

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Neural Eng        ISSN: 1741-2552            Impact factor:   5.379


  3 in total

1.  Effects of phase aberration on transabdominal focusing for a large aperture, lowf-number histotripsy transducer.

Authors:  Ellen Yeats; Dinank Gupta; Zhen Xu; Timothy L Hall
Journal:  Phys Med Biol       Date:  2022-07-19       Impact factor: 4.174

2.  Binary acoustic metasurfaces for dynamic focusing of transcranial ultrasound.

Authors:  Zhongtao Hu; Yaoheng Yang; Lu Xu; Yao Hao; Hong Chen
Journal:  Front Neurosci       Date:  2022-09-01       Impact factor: 5.152

3.  Benchmark problems for transcranial ultrasound simulation: Intercomparison of compressional wave models.

Authors:  Jean-Francois Aubry; Oscar Bates; Christian Boehm; Kim Butts Pauly; Douglas Christensen; Carlos Cueto; Pierre Gélat; Lluis Guasch; Jiri Jaros; Yun Jing; Rebecca Jones; Ningrui Li; Patrick Marty; Hazael Montanaro; Esra Neufeld; Samuel Pichardo; Gianmarco Pinton; Aki Pulkkinen; Antonio Stanziola; Axel Thielscher; Bradley Treeby; Elwin van 't Wout
Journal:  J Acoust Soc Am       Date:  2022-08       Impact factor: 2.482

  3 in total

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