Vascular effects induced by combined 1-MHz ultrasound and microbubble contrast agent treatments in vivo

被引:224
作者
Hwang, JH
Brayman, AA
Reidy, MA
Matula, TJ
Kimmey, MB
Crum, LA
机构
[1] Univ Washington, Ctr Ind & Med Ultrasound, Appl Phys Lab, Seattle, WA 98105 USA
[2] Univ Washington, Dept Med, Div Gastroenterol, Seattle, WA 98195 USA
[3] Univ Washington, Dept Pathol, Seattle, WA 98195 USA
关键词
acoustic cavitation; bioeffects; blood vessels; endothelial damage; endothelial permeability; extravasation; hemorrhage; inertial cavitation; microbubbles; Optison((R)); rabbit; sclerotherapy; thrombin; ultrasound contrast agent;
D O I
10.1016/j.ultrasmedbio.2004.12.014
中图分类号
O42 [声学];
学科分类号
070206 ; 082403 ;
摘要
Previous in vivo studies have demonstrated that microvessel hemorrhages and alterations of endothelial permeability can be produced in tissues containing microbubble- based ultrasound contrast agents when those tissues are exposed to MHz-frequency pulsed ultrasound of sufficient pressure amplitudes. The general hypothesis guiding this research was that acoustic (viz., inertial) cavitation, rather than thermal insult, is the dominant mechanism by which such effects arise. We report the results of testing five specific hypotheses in an in vivo rabbit auricular blood vessel model: (1) acoustic cavitation nucleated by microbubble contrast agent can damage the endothelia of veins at relatively low spatial-peak temporalaverage intensities, (2) such damage will be proportional to the peak negative pressure amplitude of the insonifying pulses, (3) damage will be confined largely to the intimal surface, with sparing of perivascular tissues, (4) greater damage will occur to the endothelial cells on the side of the vessel distal to the source transducer than on the proximal side and (5) ultrasound/contrast agent-induced endothelial damage can be inherently thrombogenic, or can aid sclerotherapeutic thrombogenesis through the application of otherwise subtherapeutic doses of thrombogenic drugs. Auricular vessels were exposed to 1-MHz focused ultrasound of variable peak pressure amplitude using low duty factor, fixed pulse parameters, with or without infusion of a shelled microbubble contrast agent. Extravasation of Evans blue dye and erythrocytes was assessed at the macroscopic level. Endothelial damage was assessed via scanning electron microscopy (SEM) image analysis. The hypotheses were supported by the data. We discuss potential therapeutic applications of vessel occlusion, e.g., occlusion of at-risk gastric varices. (E-mail: jooha@u.washington.edu) (c) 2005 World Federation for Ultrasound in Medicine & Biology.
引用
收藏
页码:553 / 564
页数:12
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