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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Influence of lipid shell physicochemical properties on ultrasound-induced microbubble destruction

TLDR
The first study of the effects of monolayer shell physicochemical properties on the destruction of lipid-coated microbubbles during insonification with single, one-cycle pulses at 2.25 MHz and low-duty cycles is presented.
Abstract
We present the first study of the effects of monolayer shell physicochemical properties on the destruction of lipid-coated microbubbles during insonification with single, one-cycle pulses at 2.25 MHz and low-duty cycles. Shell cohesiveness was changed by varying phospholipid and emulsifier composition, and shell microstructure was controlled by postproduction processing. Individual microbubbles with initial resting diameters between 1 and 10 /spl mu/m were isolated and recorded during pulsing with brightfield and fluorescence video microscopy. Microbubble destruction occurred through two modes: acoustic dissolution at 400 and 600 kPa and fragmentation at 800 kPa peak negative pressure. Lipid composition significantly impacted the acoustic dissolution rate, fragmentation propensity, and mechanism of excess lipid shedding. Less cohesive shells resulted in micron-scale or smaller particles of excess lipid material that shed either spontaneously or on the next pulse. Conversely, more cohesive shells resulted in the buildup of shell-associated lipid strands and globular aggregates of several microns in size; the latter showed a significant increase in total shell surface area and lability. Lipid-coated microbubbles were observed to reach a stable size over many pulses at intermediate acoustic pressures. Observations of shell microstructure between pulses allowed interpretation of the state of the shell during oscillation. We briefly discuss the implications of these results for therapeutic and diagnostic applications involving lipid-coated microbubbles as ultrasound contrast agents and drug/gene delivery vehicles.

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Citations
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Ultrasound microbubble contrast agents: fundamentals and application to gene and drug delivery.

TL;DR: This review offers a critical analysis of the state of the art of medical microbubbles and their application in therapeutic delivery and monitoring and potential clinical applications.
Journal ArticleDOI

Microbubble Compositions, Properties and Biomedical Applications

TL;DR: In this review, different microbubbles compositions and physiochemical properties are discussed in the context of current progress towards developing novel constructs for biomedical applications, with specific emphasis on molecular imaging and targeted drug/gene delivery.
Journal ArticleDOI

Ultrasound, liposomes, and drug delivery: principles for using ultrasound to control the release of drugs from liposomes

TL;DR: It is suggested that the mechanism of release may involve formation and collapse of small gas nuclei in the hydrophobic region of the lipid bilayer during exposure to LFUS, thereby inducing the formation of transient pores through which drugs are released.
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Applications of Acoustics and Cavitation to Noninvasive Therapy and Drug Delivery

TL;DR: It is shown that inertial cavitation can help address some of the major challenges of HIFU therapy by providing a means of enhancing and monitoring treatment noninvasively.
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Microbubble size isolation by differential centrifugation.

TL;DR: Overall, differential centrifugation provided a rapid and robust means for size selection and reduced polydispersity of lipid-coated microbubbles.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Quantification of Myocardial Blood Flow With Ultrasound-Induced Destruction of Microbubbles Administered as a Constant Venous Infusion

TL;DR: MBF can be quantified with myocardial contrast echocardiography during a venous infusion of microbubbles and has potential for measuring tissue perfusion in any organ accessible to ultrasound.
Journal ArticleDOI

Microbubbles in medical imaging: current applications and future directions.

TL;DR: The ability to non-invasively image molecular events with targeted microbubbles is likely to be important for characterizing pathophysiology and for developing new therapeutic strategies in the treatment of cardiovascular and neoplastic diseases.
Journal ArticleDOI

Therapeutic applications of lipid-coated microbubbles.

TL;DR: The aim is to cover the therapeutic applications of lipid-coated microbubbles and PFC emulsions in this review.
Journal ArticleDOI

Experimental and theoretical evaluation of microbubble behavior: effect of transmitted phase and bubble size

TL;DR: A new scheme is considered to detect the presence of contrast agents in the body by examining the effect of transmitted phase on the received echoes from single bubbles by using a modified Herring equation with shell terms.
Patent

Methods of preparing gas-filled liposomes

TL;DR: In this paper, the methods of and apparatus for preparing gas-filled liposomes are described. Gas-filled Liposomes prepared by these methods are particularly useful, for example, in ultrasonic imaging applications and in therapeutic drug delivery systems.
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