Abstract

Histotripsy has been demonstrated as a non-invasive, drug-free, image-guided thrombolysis method using cavitation alone. Microtripsy is a new histotripsy approach, where cavitation is generated using 1-cycle ultrasound pulses with negative pressure exceeding a threshold intrinsic to the medium. We hypothesize that, using microtripsy, cavitation can be generated entirely within the vessel lumen, without contacting the vessel wall. Microtripsy was used to create a flow channel through a clot in a vessel-mimicking phantom by scanning the therapy focus through the clot at a pre-set interval. Different scan intervals, doses, and strategies (single focus vs. electrical-steered multi-foci) were tested in both unretracted and retracted clots. The flow channel size, thrombolysis rate, and clot debris particle sizes were measured. A cavitation cloud and flow channel was successfully generated and completely confined within the 6.5 mm-diameter vessel lumen through unretracted and retracted clots. A 1-4 mm channel was created in unretracted clots, at thrombolysis rate of 3.3 min/cm. Using an electrical-steered multi-foci method, a 1–2.5 mm channel was generated through retracted clots, at thrombolysis rate of 5.5 min/cm. The debris particles generated were no greater than 150 μm. The results show the potential of microtripsy for precise and effective clot recanalization, minimizing risks of vessel damage and embolism.

Full Text
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