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Journal ArticleDOI

Optical and acoustical observations of the effects of ultrasound on contrast agents

TLDR
It is demonstrated that the low-solubility gas used in these agents can persist for several hundred milliseconds in solution, which is an attractive force for these experimental conditions, creating aggregates with distinct echo characteristics and extended persistence.
Abstract: 
Optimal use of encapsulated microbubbles for ultrasound contrast agents and drug delivery requires an understanding of the complex set of phenomena that affect the contrast agent echo and persistence. With the use of a video microscopy system coupled to either an ultrasound flow phantom or a chamber for insonifying stationary bubbles, we show that ultrasound has significant effects on encapsulated microbubbles. In vitro studies show that a train of ultrasound pulses can alter the structure of an albumin-shelled bubble, initiate various mechanisms of bubble destruction or produce aggregation that changes the echo spectrum. In this analysis, changes observed optically are compared with those observed acoustically for both albumin and lipid-shelled agents. We show that, when insonified with a narrowband pulse at an acoustic pressure of several hundred kPa, a phospholipid-shelled bubble can undergo net radius fluctuations of at least 15%; and an albumin-shelled bubble initially demonstrates constrained expansion and contraction. If the albumin shell contains air, the shell may not initially experience surface tension; therefore, the echo changes more significantly with repeated pulsing. A set of observations of contrast agent destruction is presented, which includes the slow diffusion of gas through the shell and formation of a shell defect followed by rapid diffusion of gas into the surrounding liquid. These observations demonstrate that the low-solubility gas used in these agents can persist for several hundred milliseconds in solution. With the transmission of a high-pulse repetition rate and a low pressure, the echoes from, contrast agents can be affected by secondary radiation force. Secondary radiation force is an attractive force for these experimental conditions, creating aggregates with distinct echo characteristics and extended persistence. The scattered echo from an aggregate is several times stronger and more narrowband than echoes from individual bubbles.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

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

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

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 contrast microbubbles in imaging and therapy: physical principles and engineering

TL;DR: A review of the physical aspects of these agents, exploring microbubble imaging modes, models for micro bubble oscillation and the interaction of the micro bubble with the endothelium can be found in this article.
Journal ArticleDOI

Mechanisms of contrast agent destruction

TL;DR: Various applications of contrast-assisted ultrasound, including blood vessel detection, perfusion estimation, and drug delivery, require controlled destruction of contrast agent microbubbles, and three mechanisms of microbubble destruction are considered: fragmentation, acoustic driven diffusion, and static diffusion.
References
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Book

The Acoustic Bubble

TL;DR: In this article, the authors present a bibliographie (a la fin de chaque chapitre), and index reference record created on 2004-09-07, modified on 2016-08-08
Journal ArticleDOI

Bjerknes forces on bubbles in a stationary sound field

TL;DR: Oberved et al. as mentioned in this paper measured the relative velocity of air bubbles undergoing a mutual Bjerknes force in a rigid glass container oscillated in a vertical direction at 60 Hz by a shaker table.
Journal ArticleDOI

A preliminary evaluation of the effects of primary and secondary radiation forces on acoustic contrast agents

TL;DR: In this paper, both primary and secondary radiation forces are shown to have a significant effect on the flow of microbubbles through a small vessel during insonation, and it is shown that this force is sufficient to produce aggregates that remain intact for a physiologically appropriate shear rate.
Book

A physicist's desk reference

TL;DR: This updated, expanded edition of the classic Physics Vade Mecum is a compact, comprehensive storehouse of the most useful information, formulas, numerical data, definitions, and references, designed for easy access with minimal searching.

Acoustic properties of ultrasound contrast agents

Nico de Jong
TL;DR: Coronary collateral perfusion after myocardial infarction or PTCA can be assessed and successful thrombolysis, resulting in a patent coronary artery, is often not accompanied by a return of normal perfusion or wall motion.
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