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1.
J Acoust Soc Am ; 91(2): 1113-9, 1992 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-1556312

ABSTRACT

Because of its extensive utilization in clinical practice, and because the subjects examined are often fragile and sensitive to trauma, the safety of diagnostic ultrasound has always been of concern. Of the various mechanisms through which ultrasound could act in a manner deleterious to a patient, acoustic cavitation, should it occur, appears to possess significant potential for biological damage. This paper reviews several recent reports of progress by our two groups and demonstrates the conditions under which cavitation has been observed by microsecond pulses of ultrasound. Although these results give no indications that diagnostic ultrasound may pose a true risk to a patient, they do indicate that in vivo cavitation may occur under certain conditions.


Subject(s)
Models, Biological , Models, Theoretical , Ultrasonography/instrumentation , Animals , Equipment Safety , Humans , Risk Factors , Ultrasonography/adverse effects
2.
J Acoust Soc Am ; 90(3): 1508-14, 1991 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-1939907

ABSTRACT

Experimental investigation into acoustic microcavitation is extended to include "cavitation activity" in addition to the threshold measurements using acoustic detectors. The primary setup incorporates two detectors: an unfocused, untuned 1-MHz transducer, which serves as a passive detector, and a focused 30-MHz transducer used in pulse-echo mode as the active detector. Cavitation itself is brought about by a focused piezoelectric transducer driven in pulse mode. The active detector is arranged confocally with respect to the cavitation transducer. Both the interrogating pulse and the cavitation pulse arrive simultaneously at the common focus which is the region of cavitation. Cavitation is conducted primarily at 0.75 MHz and 1% duty cycle in clean water using microparticles to seed the events. Cavitation activity appears to be directly proportional to the number density of the particles present in the cavitation medium. The fact that the active detector affects the cavitation process can be further exploited to seek interesting applications leading possibly to submicronic particle counting and testing of surface characteristics of silica particles used in liquid chromatography.


Subject(s)
Acoustics , Transducers , Ultrasonics , Water , Humans , Microspheres , Particle Size
3.
J Acoust Soc Am ; 90(3): 1515-26, 1991 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-1939908

ABSTRACT

In this work acoustic microcavitation in water is studied primarily at 0.75 MHz and 1% duty cycle. To detect cavitation, two kinds of acoustic detectors are used. The first one is an unfocused, untuned 1-MHz receiver transducer that serves as a passive detector. The other one is a focused 30-MHz transducer that is used in pulse-echo mode and is called the active detector. Cavitation itself is brought about by a focused PZT-8 crystal driven in pulse mode. The active detector is arranged confocally with respect to the cavitation transducer. Both the interrogating pulse and the cavitation pulse arrive simultaneously at the common focus, which is the region of cavitation. With the test chamber filled with clean water, no cavitation is observed, even when the cavitation transducer is driven to give its peak output of 22 bar peak negative. Cavitation is, however, observed when polystyrene microparticles are added to the host water. Our view of how these smooth, spherical, monodispersed microparticles give rise to cavitation is described with some estimates. An attempt has been made to understand whether the presence of "streaming" affects the thresholds, and it has been found that the active detector field affects the cavitation process.


Subject(s)
Acoustics , Transducers , Ultrasonics , Water , Humans , Microspheres , Particle Size
4.
J Acoust Soc Am ; 87(6): 2451-8, 1990 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-2373791

ABSTRACT

An acoustic backscattering technique for detecting transient cavitation produced by 10-microseconds-long pulses of 757-kHz ultrasound is described. The system employs 10-microseconds-long, 30-MHz center frequency tone bursts that scatter from cavitation microbubbles. Experiments were performed with suspensions of hydrophobic polystyrene spheres in ultraclean water. Transient cavitation threshold pressures measured with the active cavitation detector (ACD) were always less than or equal to those measured using a passive acoustic detection scheme. The measured cavitation thresholds decreased with increasing dissolved gas content and increasing suspended particle concentration. Results also show that ultrasonic irradiation of the polystyrene sphere suspensions by the ACD lowered the threshold pressure measured with the passive detector. A possible mechanism through which suspensions of hydrophobic particles might nucleate bubbles is presented.


Subject(s)
Suspensions/analysis , Ultrasonics , Acoustic Stimulation , Electronics
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