Presentation + Paper
1 April 2024 The efficacy of an ultrasound ring-array transducer for hyperthermia generation
David Bustamante, Yan Yan, Trevor Mitcham, Nebojsa Duric, Mohammad Mehrmohammadi
Author Affiliations +
Abstract
In mild hyperthermia (MHTh), targeted tumors are heated to approximately 41 to 44°C, typically to enhance chemo-, radiation, and/or immunotherapy. This study demonstrates the efficacy of a ring-array ultrasound (US) transducer in generating and monitoring MHTh in heterogeneous media. A ring-array provides enhanced focusing and heat localization compared to conventional linear-array US. We simulated scenarios using either one, two, or four 128-element linear-array transducers, or a 256-element ring-array transducer, to generate focused US profiles. The full width half maximum (FWHM) was measured to quantify the results. The ring-array achieved the most accurate and localized focal pressure profile with a focal spot size of 2×2mm. In a simulated heterogeneous breast model, sound speed (SS) compensation with a ring-array resulted in more efficient acoustic focusing than non-compensated fields. The focal point without SS compensation shifted spatially from its target due to acoustic aberrations, highlighting the importance of aberration correction for precise heat localization. Additionally, the ring-array's heat generation capability was evaluated in-vitro using a tissue-mimicking phantom, where the temperature at the focal point was increased by 6°C in 12 minutes and was sustainable. Lastly, the capability of a ring-array to track temperature was evaluated using US tomography (UST) in another in-vitro experiment. Here, a cylindrical inclusion in a tissue-mimicking phantom was filled with preheated water and allowed to passively cool from 45°C to 25°C. A ring-array tracked the temperature changes based on SS images with a mean error of 0.06±0.28°C. In summary, a ring-array transducer (1) achieved the best focal profile compared to standard linear transducers, (2) accomplished superior aberration correction using SS images, resulting in better aberration-free focusing in heterogeneous media, (3) generated sustainable heat at a focal point, and (4) accurately monitored temperature changes with UST.
Conference Presentation
(2024) Published by SPIE. Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
David Bustamante, Yan Yan, Trevor Mitcham, Nebojsa Duric, and Mohammad Mehrmohammadi "The efficacy of an ultrasound ring-array transducer for hyperthermia generation", Proc. SPIE 12932, Medical Imaging 2024: Ultrasonic Imaging and Tomography, 129320E (1 April 2024); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.3006248
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KEYWORDS
Acoustics

Temperature metrology

Ultrasound transducers

Transducers

Thermography

Tissues

Aberration correction

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