Abstract
In transabdominal histotripsy, ultrasound pulses are focused into the body to noninvasively destroy soft tissues via cavitation. However, the ability to focus is limited by phase aberration, or decorrelation of the ultrasound pulses due to spatial variation in the speed of sound throughout heterogeneous tissue. Phase aberration shifts, broadens, and weakens the focus, thereby reducing the safety and efficacy of histotripsy therapy. This paper reviews and discusses aberration effects in histotripsy and in related therapeutic ultrasound techniques (e.g., high intensity focused ultrasound), with an emphasis on aberration by soft tissues. Methods for aberration correction are reviewed and can be classified into two groups: model-based methods, which use segmented images of the tissue as input to an acoustic propagation model to predict and compensate phase differences, and signal-based methods, which use a receive-capable therapy array to detect phase differences by sensing acoustic signals backpropagating from the focus. The relative advantages and disadvantages of both groups of methods are discussed. Importantly, model-based methods can correct focal shift, while signal-based methods can restore substantial focal pressure, suggesting that both methods should be combined in a 2-step approach. Aberration correction will be critical to improving histotripsy treatments and expanding the histotripsy treatment envelope to enable non-invasive, non-thermal histotripsy therapy for more patients.
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More From: International journal of hyperthermia : the official journal of European Society for Hyperthermic Oncology, North American Hyperthermia Group
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