Abstract

Transcranial focused ultrasound (tFUS) has great potential in brain imaging and therapy. However, the structural and acoustic differences of the skull will cause a large number of technical problems in the application of tFUS, such as low focus energy, focal shift, and defocusing. To have a comprehensive understanding of the skull effect on tFUS, this study investigated the effects of the structural parameters (thickness, radius of curvature, and distance from the transducer) and acoustic parameters (density, acoustic speed, and absorption coefficient) of the skull model on tFUS based on acrylic plates and two simulation methods (self-programming and COMSOL). For structural parameters, our research shows that as the three factors increase the unit distance, the attenuation caused from large to small is the thickness (0.357 dB/mm), the distance to transducer (0.048 dB/mm), and the radius of curvature (0.027 dB/mm). For acoustic parameters, the attenuation caused by density (0.024 dB/30 kg/m3) and acoustic speed (0.021 dB/30 m/s) are basically the same. Additionally, as the absorption coefficient increases, the focus acoustic pressure decays exponentially. The thickness of the structural parameters and the absorption coefficient of the acoustic parameters are the most important factors leading to the attenuation of tFUS. The experimental and simulation trends are highly consistent. This work contributes to the comprehensive and quantitative understanding of how the skull influences tFUS, which further enhances the application of tFUS in neuromodulation research and treatment.

Highlights

  • Transcranial focused ultrasound is a non-invasive, localized, non-ionizing technique with applications in particular in oncology and neurosurgery

  • The results show that the effect of the acoustic acoustic absorption coefficient on acoustic parameters is the most critical

  • We have analyzed the effects of skull model structural and acoustic parameters on Transcranial focused ultrasound (tFUS) based on simulation and experiment

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Summary

Introduction

Transcranial focused ultrasound (tFUS) is a non-invasive, localized, non-ionizing technique with applications in particular in oncology and neurosurgery. It has been investigated for over 60 years, with seminal studies by Lynn and Fry establishing the potential of applying ultrasound to cerebral tissue [1,2,3]. Numerous experimental studies have demonstrated that LIFU is an emerging tool for non-invasive neuromodulation. It can transmit low-intensity ultrasound through the skull to temporarily and safely modulate regional brain activity [5,6,7,8]. In 2014, Legon probed the influence of targeted LIFU to the human primary somatosensory cortex on sensory-evoked brain activity and sensory discrimination abilities

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