Abstract

Ultrasound localization microscopy is a super-resolution vascular imaging technique which has garnered substantial interest as a tool for small animal neuroimaging, neuroscience research, and the characterization of vascular pathologies. In the pursuit of increasingly high-fidelity reconstructions of microvasculature, there remains several outstanding questions concerning this sub-diffraction imaging technology, including the accurate reconstruction of microvessels approaching the capillary scale and the pragmatic challenges associated with long data acquisition times. In the context of small animal neurovascular imaging, we posit that increasing the ultrasound imaging frequency is a straightforward approach to enable higher concentrations of microbubble contrast agents, thus increasing the likelihood of microvascular/capillary mapping and decreasing the imaging duration. We demonstrate that higher frequency imaging results in improved ULM fidelity and more efficient microbubble localization due to a smaller microbubble point-spread function that is easier to localize, and which can achieve a higher localizable concentration within the same unit volume of tissue. A select example of in vivo capillary-level vascular reconstruction is demonstrated for the highest frequency imaging probe, which has substantial implications for neuroscientists investigating microvascular function in disease states, regulation, and brain development. High frequency ULM yielding a spatial resolution of 7.1μm, as measured by Fourier ring correlation, throughout the entire depth of the brain, highlighting this technology as a highly relevant tool for neuroimaging research.

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