Abstract

Ultrasound-driven microbubbles, typically between 1 and 8 µm in diameter, are resonant scatterers that are employed as diagnostic contrast agents and emerging as potentiators of targeted therapies. Microbubbles are administered in populations whereby their radial dynamics – key to their effectiveness - are greatly affected by intrinsic (e.g. bubble size) and extrinsic (e.g. boundaries) factors. In this work, we aim to understand how two neighbouring microbubbles influence each other. We developed a finite element model of a system of two individual phospholipid-encapsulated microbubbles vibrating in proximity to each other to study the effect of inter-bubble distance on microbubble radial resonance response. For the case of two equal-sized and identical bubbles, each bubble exhibits a decrease between 7 and 10% in the frequency of maximum response (fMR) and an increase in amplitude of maximum response (AMR) by 9–11% as compared to its isolated response in free-space, depending on the bubble size examined. For a system of two unequal-sized microbubbles, the large bubble shows no significant change, however the smaller microbubble shows an increase in fMR by 7–11% and a significant decrease in AMR by 38–52%. Furthermore, in very close proximity the small bubble shows a secondary off-resonance peak at the corresponding fMR of its larger companion microbubble. Our work suggests that frequency-dependent microbubble response is greatly affected by the presence of another bubble, which has implications in both imaging and therapy applications. Furthermore, our work suggests a mechanism by which nanobubbles show significant off-resonance vibrations in the clinical frequency range, a behaviour that has been observed experimentally but heretofore unexplained.

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