In Vivo Cavitation-Based Aberration Correction of Histotripsy in Porcine Liver

Histotripsy is a noninvasive ablation technique that focuses ultrasound pulses into the body to destroy tissues via cavitation. Heterogeneous acoustic paths through tissue introduce phase errors that distort and weaken the focus, requiring additional power output from the histotripsy transducer to p...

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Veröffentlicht in:IEEE transactions on ultrasonics, ferroelectrics, and frequency control ferroelectrics, and frequency control, 2024-08, Vol.71 (8), p.1019-1029
Hauptverfasser: Yeats, Ellen, Lu, Ning, Stocker, Greyson, Komaiha, Mahmoud, Sukovich, Jonathan R., Xu, Zhen, Hall, Timothy L.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Histotripsy is a noninvasive ablation technique that focuses ultrasound pulses into the body to destroy tissues via cavitation. Heterogeneous acoustic paths through tissue introduce phase errors that distort and weaken the focus, requiring additional power output from the histotripsy transducer to perform therapy. This effect, termed phase aberration, limits the safety and efficacy of histotripsy ablation. It has been shown in vitro that the phase errors from aberration can be corrected by receiving the acoustic signals emitted by cavitation. For transabdominal histotripsy in vivo, however, cavitation-based aberration correction (AC) is complicated by acoustic signal clutter and respiratory motion. This study develops a method that enables robust, effective cavitation-based AC in vivo and evaluates its efficacy in the swine liver. The method begins with a high-speed pulsing procedure to minimize the effects of respiratory motion. Then, an optimal phase correction is obtained in the presence of acoustic clutter by filtering with the singular value decomposition (SVD). This AC method reduced the power required to generate cavitation in the liver by 26% on average (range: 0%-52%) and required ~2 s for signal acquisition and processing per focus location. These results suggest that the cavitation-based method could enable fast and effective AC for transabdominal histotripsy.
ISSN:0885-3010
1525-8955
1525-8955
DOI:10.1109/TUFFC.2024.3409638