Abstract

Ultrasound is playing an emerging role in molecular and cellular imaging thanks to new micro- and nanoscale contrast agents and reporter genes. Acoustic methods for the selective in vivo detection of these imaging agents are needed to maximize their impact in biology and medicine. Existing ultrasound pulse sequences use the nonlinearity in contrast agents' response to acoustic pressure to distinguish them from mostly linear tissue scattering. However, such pulse sequences typically scan the sample using focused transmissions, resulting in a limited frame rate and restricted field of view. Meanwhile, existing wide-field scanning techniques based on plane wave transmissions suffer from limited sensitivity or nonlinear artifacts. To overcome these limitations, we introduce an ultrafast nonlinear imaging modality combining amplitude-modulated pulses, multiplane wave transmissions, and selective coherent compounding. This technique achieves contrast imaging sensitivity comparable to much slower gold-standard amplitude modulation sequences and enables the acquisition of larger and deeper fields of view, while providing a much faster imaging framerate of 3.2 kHz. Additionally, it enables simultaneous nonlinear and linear image formation and allows concurrent monitoring of phenomena accessible only at ultrafast framerates, such as blood volume variations. We demonstrate the performance of this ultrafast amplitude modulation technique by imaging gas vesicles, an emerging class of genetically encodable biomolecular contrast agents, in several in vitro and in vivo contexts. These demonstrations include the rapid discrimination of moving contrast agents and the real-time monitoring of phagolysosomal function in the mouse liver.

Highlights

  • Ultrasound imaging enables the assessment of organ anatomy and function with high spatial and temporal resolution

  • We introduce ultrafast amplitude modulation, a nonlinear paradigm inspired by coherent plane wave compounding for very high frame rate ultrasonography16. uAM acquires nonlinear images through the coherent summation of ultrasound signals obtained after transmission of successive tilted, amplitude modulated, plane waves

  • After establishing its basic functionality, we evaluated the performance of uAM with varying angle number (Fig.3.a) in comparison to pAM13 and xAM15 (Fig.3.b,c) in a tissuemimicking phantom containing two rows of 2mm diameter wells filled with gas vesicles (GVs)

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Summary

Introduction

Ultrasound imaging enables the assessment of organ anatomy and function with high spatial and temporal resolution (typically < 500 μm and 10 ms). UAM acquires nonlinear images through the coherent summation of ultrasound signals obtained after transmission of successive tilted, amplitude modulated, plane waves.

Results
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