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Τετάρτη 10 Ιανουαρίου 2018

Bubble-Induced Color Doppler Feedback Correlates with Histotripsy-Induced Destruction of Structural Components in Liver Tissue

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Publication date: Available online 9 January 2018
Source:Ultrasound in Medicine & Biology
Author(s): Jonathan J. Macoskey, Xi Zhang, Timothy L. Hall, Jiaqi Shi, Shahaboddin Alahyari Beig, Eric Johnsen, Fred T. Lee, Charles A. Cain, Zhen Xu
Bubble-induced color Doppler (BCD) is a histotripsy-therapy monitoring technique that uses Doppler ultrasound to track the motion of residual cavitation nuclei that persist after the collapse of the histotripsy bubble cloud. In this study, BCD is used to monitor tissue fractionation during histotripsy tissue therapy, and the BCD signal is correlated with the destruction of structural and non-structural components identified histologically to further understand how BCD monitors the extent of treatment. A 500-kHz, 112-element phased histotripsy array is used to generate approximately 6- × 6- × 7-mm lesions within ex vivo bovine liver tissue by scanning more than 219 locations with 30–1000 pulses per location. A 128-element L7-4 imaging probe is used to acquire BCD signals during all treatments. The BCD signal is then quantitatively analyzed using the time-to-peak rebound velocity (tprv) metric. Using the Pearson correlation coefficient, the tprv is compared with histologic analytics of lesions generated by various numbers of pulses using a significance level of 0.001. Histologic analytics in this study include viable cell count, reticulin-stained type III collagen area and trichrome-stained type I collagen area. It is found that the tprv metric has a statistically significant correlation with the change in reticulin-stained type III collagen area with a Pearson correlation coefficient of −0.94 (p < 0.001), indicating that changes in BCD are more likely because of destruction of the structural components of tissue.



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