4.5 Article

NUMERICAL STUDY OF ACOUSTIC HOLOGRAMS FOR DEEP-BRAIN TARGETING THROUGH THE TEMPORAL BONE WINDOW

Journal

ULTRASOUND IN MEDICINE AND BIOLOGY
Volume 48, Issue 5, Pages 872-886

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
DOI: 10.1016/j.ultrasmedbio.2022.01.010

Keywords

Acoustic holograms; Therapeutic ultrasound; Neuromodulation; Blood-brain barrier opening

Funding

  1. Spanish Ministry of Science, Innovation and Universities (MICINN) [IJC2018-037897-I, FPU19/00601, PID2019-111436RB-C22]
  2. Agencia Valenciana de la Innovacio [INNCON/2021/8]
  3. European Union through the Programa Operativo del Fondo Europeo de Desarrollo Regional (FEDER) of the Comunitat Valenciana [ID-IFEDER/2018/022, IDIFEDER/2021/004]

Ask authors/readers for more resources

This study numerically investigates the performance of acoustic holograms focusing on the thalamic nuclei through the temporal bone window. The results show that by using patient-specific holographic lenses, the focal spot can be adapted to the thalamic nuclei while mitigating skull aberrations. Additionally, the study demonstrates that acoustic images can be correctly restored even under misalignment errors between the source and the skull.
Acoustic holograms can encode complex wavefronts to compensate the aberrations of a therapeutical ultrasound beam propagating through heterogeneous tissues such as the skull, and simultaneously, they can generate diffraction-limited acoustic images, that is, arbitrary shaped focal spots. In this work, we numerically study the performance of acoustic holograms focusing at the thalamic nuclei when the source is located at the temporal bone window. The temporal window is the thinnest area of the lateral skull and it is mainly hairless, so it is a desirable area through which to transmit ultrasonic waves to the deep brain. However, in targeting from this area the bilateral thalamic nuclei are not aligned with the elongated focal spots of conventional focused transducers, and in addition, skull aberrations can distort the focal spot. We found that by using patient-specific holographic lenses coupled to a single-element 650-kHz-frequency 65-mm-aperture source, the focal spot can be sharply adapted to the thalamic nuclei in a bilateral way while skull aberrations are mitigated. Furthermore, the performance of these holograms was studied under misalignment errors between the source and the skull, concluding that for misalignments up to 5, acoustic images are correctly restored. This work paves the way to designing clinical applications of transcranial ultrasound such as blood -brain barrier opening for drug delivery or deep-brain neuromodulation using this low-cost and personalized technology, presenting desirable aspects for long-term treatments because the patient's head does not need to be shaved completely and skull heating is low.(E-mail: nojigon@upv.es) (C) 2022 World Federation for Ultrasound in Medicine & Biology. All rights reserved.

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