Abstract

The potential of transcranial magnetic resonance (MR)-guided histotripsy for brain applications has been described in prior in vivo studies in the swine brain through an excised human skull. The safety and accuracy of transcranial MR-guided histotripsy (tcMRgHt) rely on pre-treatment targeting guidance. In the work described here, we investigated the feasibility and accuracy of using ultrasound-induced low-temperature heating and MR thermometry for histotripsy pre-treatment targeting in ex vivo bovine brain. A 15-element, 750-kHz MRI-compatible ultrasound transducer with modified drivers that can deliver both low-temperature heating and histotripsy acoustic pulses was used to treat seven bovine brain samples. The samples were first heated to an approximately 1.6°C temperature increase at the focus, and MR thermometry was used to localize the target. Once the targeting was confirmed, a histotripsy lesion was generated at the focus and visualized on post-histotripsy MR images. The accuracy of MR thermometry targeting was evaluated with the mean/standard deviation of the difference between the locus of peak heating identified by MR thermometry and the center of mass of the post-treatment histotripsy lesion, which was 0.59/0.31 mm and 1.31/0.93 mm in the transverse and longitudinal directions, respectively. This study determined that MR thermometry could provide reliable pre-treatment targeting for transcranial MR-guided histotripsy treatment.

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