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1.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32396081

ABSTRACT

The phase correction necessary for transcranial ultrasound therapy requires numerical simulation to noninvasively assess the phase shift induced by the skull bone. Ideally, the numerical simulations need to be fast enough for clinical implementation in a brain therapy protocol and to provide accurate estimation of the phase shift to optimize the refocusing through the skull. In this article, we experimentally performed transcranial ultrasound focusing at 900 kHz on N = 5 human skulls. To reduce the computation time, we propose here to perform the numerical simulation at 450 kHz and use the corresponding phase shifts experimentally at 900 kHz. We demonstrate that a 450-kHz simulation restores 94.2% of the pressure when compared with a simulation performed at 900 kHz and 85.0% of the gold standard pressure obtained by an invasive time reversal procedure based on the signal recorded by a hydrophone placed at the target. From a 900- to 450-kHz simulation, the grid size is divided by 8, and the computation time is divided by 10.


Subject(s)
High-Intensity Focused Ultrasound Ablation , Skull/diagnostic imaging , Brain/diagnostic imaging , Brain/surgery , Computer Simulation , Humans , Signal Processing, Computer-Assisted , Ultrasonography
2.
IEEE Trans Biomed Eng ; 67(1): 27-37, 2020 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30932823

ABSTRACT

For successful brain therapy, transcranial focused ultrasound must compensate for the time shifts induced locally by the skull. The patient-specific phase profile is currently generated by multi-element arrays which, over time, have tended toward increasing element count. We recently introduced a new approach, consisting of a single-element transducer coupled to an acoustic lens of controlled thickness. By adjusting the local thickness of the lens, we were able to induce phase differences which compensated those induced by the skull. Nevertheless, such an approach suffers from an apparent limitation: the lens is a priori designed for one specific target. In this paper, we demonstrate the possibility of taking advantage of the isoplanatic angle of the aberrating skull in order to steer the focus by mechanically moving the transducer/acoustic lens pair around its initial focusing position. This study, conducted on three human skull samples, demonstrates that tilting of the transducer with the lens restores a single -3 dB focal volume at 914 kHz for a steering up to ±11 mm in the transverse direction, and ±10 mm in the longitudinal direction, around the initial focal region.


Subject(s)
Acoustics/instrumentation , Lenses , Skull , Ultrasonic Therapy/instrumentation , Ultrasonic Therapy/methods , Brain/diagnostic imaging , Brain/physiology , Computer Simulation , Humans , Skull/diagnostic imaging , Skull/physiology , Transducers
3.
Phys Med Biol ; 63(13): 135012, 2018 07 02.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29864024

ABSTRACT

Cavitation activity induced by ultrasound may occur during high intensity focused ultrasound (HIFU) treatment, due to bubble nucleation under high peak negative pressure, and during blood-brain-barrier (BBB) disruption, due to injected ultrasound contrast agents (UCAs). Such microbubble activity has to be monitored to assess the safety and efficiency of ultrasonic brain treatments. In this study, we aim at assessing whether cavitation occurs within cerebral tissue by binary discriminating cavitation activity originating from the inside or the outside of the skull. The results were obtained from both in vitro experiments mimicking BBB opening, by using UCA flow, and in vitro thermal necrosis in calf brain samples. The sonication was applied using a 1 MHz focused transducer and the acoustic response of the microbubbles was recorded with a wideband passive cavitation detector. The spectral content of the recorded signal was used to localize microbubble activity. Since the skull acts as a low pass filter, the ratio of high harmonics to low harmonics is lower for cavitation events located inside the skull compared to events outside the skull. Experiments showed that the ratio of the 5/2 ultraharmonic to the 1/2 subharmonic for binary localization cavitation activity achieves 100% sensitivity and specificity for both monkey and human skulls. The harmonic ratio of the fourth to the second harmonic provided 100% sensitivity and 96% and 46% specificity on a non-human primate for thermal necrosis and BBB opening, respectively. Nonetheless, the harmonic ratio remains promising for human applications, as the experiments showed 100% sensitivity and 100% specificity for both thermal necrosis and BBB opening through the human skull. The study requires further validation on a larger number of skull samples.


Subject(s)
Blood-Brain Barrier/radiation effects , Extracorporeal Shockwave Therapy/adverse effects , Microbubbles/adverse effects , Animals , Blood-Brain Barrier/diagnostic imaging , Computer Simulation , Humans , Proof of Concept Study , Sonication/adverse effects , Ultrasonography
4.
Phys Med Biol ; 63(2): 025026, 2018 01 16.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29219124

ABSTRACT

The development of multi-element arrays for better control of the shape of ultrasonic beams has opened the way for focusing through highly aberrating media, such as the human skull. As a result, the use of brain therapy with transcranial-focused ultrasound has rapidly grown. Although effective, such technology is expensive. We propose a disruptive, low-cost approach that consists of focusing a 1 MHz ultrasound beam through a human skull with a single-element transducer coupled with a tailored silicone acoustic lens cast in a 3D-printed mold and designed using computed tomography-based numerical acoustic simulation. We demonstrate on N = 3 human skulls that adding lens-based aberration correction to a single-element transducer increases the deposited energy on the target 10 fold.


Subject(s)
Acoustics , Brain Mapping/methods , Printing, Three-Dimensional/instrumentation , Skull/diagnostic imaging , Transducers , Ultrasonic Therapy/instrumentation , Ultrasonic Therapy/methods , Humans , Lenses
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