Abstract

Polymer nanoparticles and microparticles have been used primarily for drug delivery. There is now growing interest in further developing polymer-based solid cavitation agents to also enhance ultrasound imaging. We previously reported on a facile method to produce hollow poly(lactic-co-glycolic acid) (PLGA) microparticles with different diameters and degrees of porosity. Here, we investigate the cavitation response from these PLGA microparticles with both therapeutic and diagnostic ultrasound transducers. Interestingly, all formulations exhibited stable cavitation; larger porous and multicavity particles also provided inertial cavitation at elevated acoustic pressure amplitudes. These larger particles also achieved contrast enhancement comparable to that of commercially available ultrasound contrast agents, with a maximum recorded contrast-to-tissue ratio of 28 dB. Therefore, we found that multicavity PLGA microparticles respond to both therapeutic and diagnostic ultrasound and may be applied as a theranostic agent.

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