Abstract
The ability to monitor cavitation activity during ultrasound and microbubble-mediated procedures is of high clinical value. However, there has been little reported literature comparing the cavitation characteristics of different clinical microbubbles, nor have current clinical scanners been used to perform passive cavitation detection in real time. The goal of this work was to investigate and characterize standard microbubble formulations (Optison, Sonovue, Sonazoid, and a custom microbubble made with similar components as Definity) with a custom passive cavitation detector (two confocal single-element focused transducers) and with a Philips EPIQ scanner with a C5-1 curvilinear probe passively listening. We evaluated three different methods for investigating cavitation thresholds, two from previously reported work and one developed in this work. For all three techniques, it was observed that the inertial cavitation thresholds were between 0.1 and 0.3 MPa for all agents when detected with both systems. Notably, we found that most microbubble formulations in bulk solution behaved generally similarly, with some differences. We show that these characteristics and thresholds are maintained when using a diagnostic ultrasound system for detecting cavitation activity. We believe that a systematic evaluation of the frequency response of the cavitation activity of different microbubbles in order to inform real-time therapy monitoring using a clinical ultrasound device could make an immediate clinical impact.
Accepted Version
Published Version
Talk to us
Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have