Abstract

Targeted microbubbles detected with high-frequency ultrasound can establish the molecular expression of blood vessels with submillimeter resolution. To improve microbubble-specific imaging at high frequencies, the subharmonic and second harmonic signal from individual microbubbles were measured as a function of size and pressure. Single phospholipid-shell microbubbles (1.1 to 5.0 μm in diameter) bound to gelatin, co-aligned with an optical microscope and transducer, were insonated with 30 MHz Gaussian-enveloped pulses at pressures from 20 kPa to 1 MPa with –6 dB one-way bandwidths of 11%, 20% and 45%. A subharmonic signal (15 MHz) was detected above a pressure threshold of 110 kPa—independent of bandwidth. The signal peaked for microbubbles 1.60 μm in diameter subject to 20% and 11% bandwidth pulses, and 1.80 μm for 45% bandwidth pulses, for pressures up to 400 kPa, agreeing with the notion that microbubbles insonated at twice their resonant frequency preferentially emit a subharmonic component. For pressures between 400 kPa and 1 MPa, a broader range of microbubbles emitted a subharmonic signal, and microbubbles below 1.70 μm in diameter were disrupted. The second harmonic signal measured, within the limited experimental conditions, was consistent with nonlinear propagation. Further, the results shed light on the effect of the shell on the phase of the subharmonic signal with respect to the fundamental signal. (E-mail: michael.sprague@sri.utoronto.ca)

Full Text
Paper version not known

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call