DocumentCode
6705
Title
High-intensity focused ultrasound monitoring using harmonic motion imaging for focused ultrasound (HMIFU) under boiling or slow denaturation conditions
Author
Hou, Gary Y. ; Marquet, Fabrice ; Shutao Wang ; Apostolakis, Iason-Zacharias ; Konofagou, Elisa E.
Author_Institution
Dept. of Biomed. Eng., Columbia Univ., New York, NY, USA
Volume
62
Issue
7
fYear
2015
fDate
Jul-15
Firstpage
1308
Lastpage
1319
Abstract
Harmonic motion imaging for focused ultrasound (HMIFU) is a recently developed high-intensity focused ultrasound (HIFU) treatment monitoring method that utilizes an amplitude-modulated therapeutic ultrasound beam to induce an oscillatory radiation force at the HIFU focus and estimates the focal tissue displacement to monitor the HIFU thermal treatment. In this study, the performance of HMIFU under acoustic, thermal, and mechanical effects was investigated. The performance of HMIFU was assessed in ex vivo canine liver specimens (n = 13) under slow denaturation or boiling regimes. A passive cavitation detector (PCD) was used to assess the acoustic cavitation activity, and a bare-wire thermocouple was used to monitor the focal temperature change. During lesioning with slow denaturation, high quality displacements (correlation coefficient above 0.97) were observed under minimum cavitation noise, indicating the tissue initial-softeningthen- stiffening property change. During HIFU with boiling, HMIFU monitored a consistent change in lesion-to-background displacement contrast (0.46 ± 0.37) despite the presence of strong cavitation noise due to boiling during lesion formation. Therefore, HMIFU effectively monitored softening-then-stiffening during lesioning under slow denaturation, and detected lesioning under boiling with a distinct change in displacement contrast under boiling in the presence of cavitation. In conclusion, HMIFU was shown under both boiling and slow denaturation regimes to be effective in HIFU monitoring and lesioning identification without being significantly affected by cavitation noise.
Keywords
acoustic noise; bioacoustics; biological tissues; biomechanics; biomedical ultrasonics; biothermics; boiling; cavitation; liver; radiation therapy; HIFU thermal treatment; acoustic cavitation activity; acoustic effects; amplitude-modulated therapeutic ultrasound beam; bare-wire thermocouple; boiling condition; canine liver; correlation coefficient; displacement contrast; focal temperature change; focal tissue displacement; harmonic motion imaging; high-intensity focused ultrasound monitoring; lesion formation; lesion-background displacement contrast; mechanical effects; minimum cavitation noise; oscillatory radiation force; passive cavitation detector; slow denaturation condition; thermal effects; tissue initial-softening-stiffening property; Acoustics; Imaging; Lesions; Monitoring; Temperature measurement; Temperature sensors; Ultrasonic imaging;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Ultrasonics, Ferroelectrics, and Frequency Control, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
0885-3010
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/TUFFC.2014.006969
Filename
7152726
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