Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
1761037 | Ultrasound in Medicine & Biology | 2011 | 13 Pages |
Abstract
In the preclinical studies reported here, VX2 cancer within rabbit liver has been treated by bulk ultrasound ablation employing miniaturized image-ablate arrays. Array probes were constructed with 32 elements in a 2.3 à 20 mm2 aperture, packaged within a 3.1 mm stainless steel tube with a cooling and coupling balloon for in vivo use. The probes were measured capable of 50% fractional bandwidth for pulse-echo imaging (center frequency 4.4 MHz) with >110 W/cm2 surface intensity available at sonication frequencies 3.5 and 4.8 MHz. B-scan imaging performance of the arrays was measured to be comparable to larger diagnostic linear arrays, although nearfield image quality was reduced by ringdown artifacts. A series of in vivo ablation procedures was performed using an unfocused 32-element aperture firing at 4.8 MHz with exposure durations 20-70.5 s and in situ spatial average, temporal average intensities 22.4-38.5 W/cm2. Ablation of a complete tumor cross-section was confirmed by vital staining in seven of 12 exposures, with four exposures ablating an additional margin >1 mm beyond the tumor in all directions. Analysis suggests a threshold ablation effect, with complete ablation of tumor cross-sections for exposures with delivery of >838 J acoustic energy. The results show feasibility for in vivo liver cancer ablation using miniaturized image-ablate arrays suitable for interstitial deployment.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Physics and Astronomy
Acoustics and Ultrasonics
Authors
T. Douglas Mast, Peter G. Barthe, Inder Raj S. Makin, Michael H. Slayton, Chandra Priya Karunakaran, Mark T. Burgess, Amel Alqadah, Steven M. Rudich,