Evolution of Bubble Clouds Induced by Pulsed Cavitational Ultrasound Therapy---Histotripsy

Zhen Xu, Mekhala Raghavan, Timothy L. Hall, Mary-Ann Mycek, J. Brian Fowlkes, and Charles A. Cain

ABSTRACT Mechanical tissue fractionation can be achieved using successive, high-intensity ultrasound pulses in a process termed histotripsy. Histotripsy has many potential clinical applications where noninvasive tissue removal is desired. The primary mechanism for histotripsy is believed to be cavitation. Using fast-gated imaging, this paper studies the evolution of a cavitating bubble cloud induced by a histotripsy pulse (10 and 14 cycles) at peak negative pressures exceeding 21 MPa. Bubble clouds are generated inside a gelatin phantom and at a tissue-water interface, representing two situations encountered clinically. In both environments, the imaging results show that the bubble clouds share the same evolutionary trend. The bubble cloud and individual bubbles in the cloud were generated by the first cycle of the pulse, grew with each cycle during the pulse, and continued to grow and collapsed several hundred microseconds after the pulse. For example, the bubbles started under 10 μm, grew to 50 μm during the pulse, and continued to grow >100 μm after the pulse. The results also suggest that the bubble clouds generated in the two environments differ in growth and collapse duration, void fraction, shape, and size. This study furthers our understanding of the dynamics of bubble clouds induced by histotripsy.

Digital Object Identifier 10.1109/TUFFC.2008.764

© 2008, by The Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers, Inc. All rights reserved.

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