Abstract

The enhancement of heating due to inertial cavitation has been focused to reduce the long treatment time of conventional high-intensity focused ultrasound (HIFU) therapy. The influences of the physical properties of surrounding tissues, initial void fraction, and spatial distribution of bubbles on microbubble-enhanced HIFU are examined. A bubble dynamics equation based on the Keller-Miksis equation is employed in consideration of the elasticity of surrounding tissue. The mixture phase and bubbles are coupled by the Euler-Lagrange method to take into account the interaction between ultrasound and bubbles. As a result, the temperature around the target increases with the initial void fraction. But at the high void fraction of 10(-5), ultrasound is too attenuated to heat the target, and the heating region moves to the transducer side. On the other hand, both the viscosity and shear elasticity of the surrounding media reduce the attenuation of ultrasound propagation through the bubbly mixture. Numerical results show that localized heating is induced with increasing viscosity or shear elasticity, though it depends on the pressure amplitudes. In addition, it was numerically confirmed that the localization of the microbubble distribution is important to obtain efficient localized heating.

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