The use of twinkling artifact of Doppler imaging to monitor cavitation in tissue during high intensity focused ultrasound therapy - Abstract

In high intensity focused ultrasound (HIFU) therapy, it is important to monitor the presence and activity of microbubbles in tissue during treatment.

The current methods-passive cavitation detection (PCD) and B-mode imaging-have limited sensitivity, especially to small-size, non-violently collapsing microbubbles. Here, a new method for microbubble detection is proposed, based on "twinkling" artifact (TA) of Doppler imaging. TA occurs when color Doppler ultrasound is used to image hard objects in tissue (e.g., kidney stones) and is displayed as brightly colored spots. As demonstrated recently, TA can be explained by irregular scattering of the Doppler ensemble pulses from the fluctuating microbubbles trapped in crevices of the kidney stone. In this work, TA was used to detect cavitation in tissue and in polyacrylamide gel phantoms during pulsed 1 MHz HIFU exposures with different peak negative pressures (1.5-11 MPa). At each pressure level, the probability of cavitation occurrence was characterized using TA and the broadband signals recorded by PCD, aligned confocally with the HIFU transducer. The results indicate that TA is more sensitive to the onset of cavitation than conventional PCD detection, and allows for accurate spatial localization of the bubbles. [Work supported by RFBR and NIH (EB007643, 1K01EB015745, and R01CA154451).]

Written by:
Khokhlova TD, Li T, Sapozhnikov OA, Hwang JH.   Are you the author?
School of Med., Univ. of Washington, 1013 NE 40th St., Seattle, WA.

Reference: J Acoust Soc Am. 2013 May;133(5):3315.
doi: 10.1121/1.4805522


PubMed Abstract
PMID: 23654864

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