4.7 Article

Reconfigurable Magnetic Microswarm for Accelerating tPA-Mediated Thrombolysis Under Ultrasound Imaging

Journal

IEEE-ASME TRANSACTIONS ON MECHATRONICS
Volume 27, Issue 4, Pages 2267-2277

Publisher

IEEE-INST ELECTRICAL ELECTRONICS ENGINEERS INC
DOI: 10.1109/TMECH.2021.3103994

Keywords

Imaging; Ultrasonic imaging; Magnetic resonance imaging; Mathematical model; Blood; Biomedical imaging; Drugs; Collective behavior; magnetic control; medical microrobots; thrombolysis; ultrasound imaging

Funding

  1. Hong Kong Research Grants Council [JLFS/E-402/18]
  2. Innovation and Technology Fund Projects - Hong Kong Innovation and Technology Commission [MRP/036/18X]
  3. Croucher Foundation [CAS20403]
  4. Chinese University of Hong Kong
  5. Multi-Scale Medical Robotics Center, InnoHK, at the Hong Kong Science Park

Ask authors/readers for more resources

This article proposes a strategy to accelerate tissue plasminogen activator (tPA)-mediated thrombolysis using a microswarm under ultrasound imaging. The microswarm is formed in blood and navigated with switchable locomotion modes. Simulations show that 3-D flow is induced around the microswarm, enhancing mass transfer and shear stress near the clot-fluid interface. Experimental results demonstrate that the microswarm-assisted lysis rate is significantly enhanced compared to that using tPA drug only. The method provides a strategy to increase the efficiency of tPA-mediated thrombolysis by applying an ultrasound-localized microrobotic swarm, indicating the potential of swarming micro/nanorobots as effective tools for imaging-guided therapy.
In this article, we propose a strategy to accelerate tissue plasminogen activator (tPA)-mediated thrombolysis using a microswarm under ultrasound imaging. The microswarm is formed in blood using an oscillating magnetic field and navigated with switchable locomotion modes. The aspect ratio of the microswarm can be reversibly tuned by modulating the input field, enabling the capability to adapt to different clot regions. Simulations show that 3-D flow is induced around the microswarm, which enhances the mass transfer and shear stress near the clot-fluid interface. Guided by ultrasound imaging, the microswarm can be navigated toward clot regions and deformed to adapt to blood clots with different widths. Affected by the enhanced fluid convection and shear stress, experimental results show that the microswarm-assisted lysis rate enhances up to 3.13-fold compared to that using tPA drug only. Moreover, the comparison between microswarm-assisted thrombolysis in phosphate buffered saline and blood environments validates our modeling and simulation results. Our method provides a strategy to increase the efficiency of tPA-mediated thrombolysis by applying an ultrasound-localized microrobotic swarm, indicating that swarming micro/nanorobots have the potential as effective tools toward imaging-guided therapy.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.7
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available