4.6 Article

Repeated Acoustic Vaporization of Perfluorohexane Nanodroplets for Contrast-Enhanced Ultrasound Imaging

Publisher

IEEE-INST ELECTRICAL ELECTRONICS ENGINEERS INC
DOI: 10.1109/TUFFC.2021.3093828

Keywords

Ultrasonic imaging; Imaging; Phantoms; Acoustics; Optical imaging; Lipidomics; Transducers; Acoustic droplet vaporization (ADV); high intensity focused ultrasound (HIFU); perfluorocarbon nanodroplets (PFCnDs); phase change contrast agents

Funding

  1. NIH [R21CA197409]
  2. Prouty Pilot Grant from the Norris Cotton Cancer Center

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Superheated perfluorocarbon nanodroplets are emerging ultrasound imaging contrast agents with biocompatible components and unique phase-change dynamics. They provide high contrast ultrasound images by undergoing a liquid-to-gas phase change upon exposure to a high-intensity pulse. However, their single-use limitation has been addressed by using a perfluorohexane core that allows the microbubbles to recondense back into their stable form, overcoming this drawback.
Superheated perfluorocarbon nanodroplets are emerging ultrasound imaging contrast agents that boast biocompatible components, unique phase-change dynamics, and therapeutic loading capabilities. Upon exposure to a sufficiently high-intensity pulse of acoustic energy, the nanodroplet's perfluorocarbon core undergoes a liquid-to-gas phase change and becomes an echogenic microbubble, providing ultrasound contrast. The controllable activation leads to high-contrast images, while the small size of the nanodroplets promotes longer circulation times and better in vivo stability. One drawback, however, is that the nanodroplets can only be vaporized a single time, limiting their versatility. Recently, we and others have addressed this issue by using a perfluorohexane core, which has a boiling point above body temperature. Thus after vaporization, the microbubbles recondense back into their stable nanodroplet form. Previous work with perfluorohexane nanodroplets relied on optical activation via pulsed laser absorption of an encapsulated dye. This strategy limits the imaging depth and temporal resolution of the method. In this study, we overcome these limitations by demonstrating acoustic droplet vaporization with 1.1-MHz high-intensity focused ultrasound (HIFU). A short-duration, high-amplitude pulse of focused ultrasound provides a sufficiently strong peak negative pressure to initiate vaporization. A custom imaging sequence was developed to enable the synchronization of a HIFU transducer and a linear array imaging transducer. We show a visualization of repeated acoustic activation of perfluorohexane nanodroplets in polyacrylamide tissue-mimicking phantoms. We further demonstrate the detection of hundreds of vaporization events from individual nanodroplets with activation thresholds well below the tissue cavitation limit. Overall, this approach has the potential to result in reliable and repeatable contrast-enhanced ultrasound imaging at clinically relevant depths.

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