Volumetric
Passive Acoustic Mapping and Cavitation
Detection of Nanobubbles under Low-Frequency Insonation
Posted on 2024-10-29 - 17:35
Gas bubbles, commonly used in medical ultrasound (US),
witness
advancements with nanobubbles (NB), providing improved capabilities
over microbubbles (MB). NBs offer enhanced penetration into capillaries
and the ability to extravasate into tumors following systemic injection,
alongside prolonged circulation and persistent acoustic contrast.
Low-frequency insonation (<1 MHz) with NBs holds great potential
in inducing significant bioeffects, making the monitoring of their
acoustic response critical to achieving therapeutic goals. We introduce
a US-guided focused US system comprising a one-dimensional (1D) motorized
rotating imaging transducer positioned within a low-frequency therapeutic
transducer (center frequencies of 105 and 200 kHz), facilitating precise
monitoring of NB cavitation activity in three-dimensional (3D) and
comparison with MBs. Passive cavitation detection (PCD) revealed frequency-dependent
responses, with NBs exhibiting significantly higher stable and inertial
cavitation doses compared to MBs of the same gas volume when excited
at a center frequency of 105 kHz and peak negative pressures ranging
from 100 to 350 kPa. At 200 kHz, MBs showed higher cavitation doses
than NBs. PCD showed that 105 kHz enhanced both NBs’ and MBs’
oscillations compared to 200 kHz. The system was further used for
3D passive acoustic mapping (PAM) to provide spatial resolution alongside
PCD monitoring. Two-dimensional PAM was captured for each rotation
angle and used to generate a complete 3D PAM reconstruction. Experimental
results obtained from a tube phantom demonstrated consistent contrast
PAM full-width half-maximum (FWHM) as a function of rotation angle,
with similar FWHM between MBs and NBs. Frequency-selective PAM maps
distinguished between stable and inertial cavitation via the harmonic,
ultraharmonic and broadband content, offering insights into cavitation
dynamics. These findings highlight NBs’ superior performance
at lower frequencies. The developed 3D-PAM technique with a 1D transducer
presents a promising technology for real-time, noninvasive monitoring
of cavitation-based US therapies.
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Shinar, Hila; Ilovitsh, Tali (2024). Volumetric
Passive Acoustic Mapping and Cavitation
Detection of Nanobubbles under Low-Frequency Insonation. ACS Publications. Collection. https://doi.org/10.1021/acsmaterialsau.4c00064