Abstract

Our previous work has investigated spatial-temporal dynamics of cavitation during focused ultrasound (FU) exposures using acoustic cavitation detection and high-speed photography. In this paper, acoustic, thermal and sonoluminescence investigation of enhanced cavitation of flowing polymer- and lipid-shelled microbubbles (MBs) during FU exposures were exposed as the two types of shelled MBs and pure controls flowing through a vessel in the phantom with varying flow velocities at different acoustic power levels. Vibration characteristics of two shelled MBs and the effects of acoustic pressure threshold for destruction of the two shelled MBs on the intensity and spatial distribution of sonoluminescence and sonochemiluminescence were investigated using an electron-multiplying charge coupled device camera. The inertial cavitation dose (ICD), sonochemiluminescence intensity and temperature for the lipid-shelled MBs were higher than those for the polymer-shelled MBs, which were both higher than pure controls. Temperature around the vessel initially increased with increasing flow velocities of MBs, followed by a decrease of the peak temperatures with increasing flow velocities when the velocity was much higher. Meanwhile, ICD showed a trend of increases with increasing flow velocity. Thermal lesion appeared around the vessel as MBs flowing through the vessel, at which lesion was not observed originally without MBs.

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