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Focused ultrasound

High-intensity focused ultrasound (HIFU) is a non-invasive therapeutic technique[1] that uses non-ionizing ultrasonic waves to heat or ablate tissue. HIFU can be used to increase the flow of blood or lymph or to destroy tissue, such as tumors, via thermal and mechanical mechanisms. Given the prevalence and relatively low cost of ultrasound generation mechanisms, the premise of HIFU is that it is expected to be a non-invasive and low-cost therapy that can at least outperform care in the operating room.

Focused ultrasound
Diagram showing how HIFU can be used to destroy tissue in the body. An acoustic lens is used to focus sound to a small point in the body. The sound propagates through many layers of tissue. Because of the focal gain, only tissue at the focus is destroyed.
Other namesMagnetic resonance guided focused ultrasound surgery (MRgFUS), Focused Ultrasound Surgery (FUS)
[edit on Wikidata]

The technology is different from that used in ultrasonic imaging, though lower frequencies and continuous, rather than pulsed, waves are used to achieve the necessary thermal doses. However, pulsed waves may also be used if mechanical rather than thermal damage is desired. Acoustic lenses are often used to achieve the necessary intensity at the target tissue without damaging the surrounding tissue. The ideal pattern diagram is the beam-focusing of a magnifying glass of sunlight; only the focal point of the magnifying glass has high temperature.

HIFU is combined with other imaging techniques such as medical ultrasound or MRI to enable guidance of the treatment and monitoring.

History edit

Studies on localized prostate cancer showed that, after treatment, progression-free survival rates were high for low- and intermediate- risk patients with recurrent prostate cancer.[2] The InsighTec ExAblate 2000 was the first MRgFUS system to obtain FDA market approval.[3]

Medical uses edit

There is no clear consensus on the boundaries between HIFU and other forms of therapeutic ultrasound. In particular literature, HIFU refers to the high levels of energy required to destroy tissue through ablation or cavitation, although it is also sometimes used to describe lower intensity applications such as occupational therapy and physical therapy.

Either way, HIFU is used to non-invasively heat tissue deep in the body without the need for an incision.[4] The main applications are the destruction of tissue caused by hypertharmia, increasing perfusion and physical therapy. The use of ultrasound in the treatment of musculoskeletal conditions is another use in the physiotherapy setting.[5]

Neurological disorders edit

 
Frontal MRI four days after MRgFUS (MRI-guided high-intensity focused ultrasound): Left ventral intermediate nucleus (Vim) thalamotomy. 79-year-old man with essential tremor.

One of the first applications of HIFU was the treatment of Parkinson's disease in the 1940s. Although ineffective at the time, HIFU has the capacity to lesion pathology. A focused ultrasound system is approved in Israel, Canada, Italy, Korea and Russia to treat essential tremor,[6] neuropathic pain,[7] and Parkinsonian tremor.[8] This approach enables treatment of the brain without an incision or radiation. In 2016, the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) approved Insightec's Exablate system to treat essential tremor.[9] Treatment for other thalamocortical dysrhythmias and psychiatric conditions are under investigation.[10]

Cancers edit

Prostate edit

HIFU may be effective for detecting prostate cancer.[11][12][13]

Liver edit

HIFU is studied in liver cancer and in many studies report a high response rate and positive outcome.[14] During the treatment of metastasized liver cancer with HIFU, immune responses have been observed in locations that are distant from the focal region.[15]

Prostate enlargement edit

Treatment of prostate enlargement (benign prostatic hyperplasia) by HIFU from inside the intestine (transrectal) has turned out to be unsuccessful.[16][17]

In some countries, not in USA, HIFU has also been offered from the inside of the prostate, that is, via a catheter in the prostatic urethra. Evidence as of 2019 is lacking.[18]

In England the National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (NICE) in 2018 classified the method as "not recommended".[19]

Mechanism edit

HIFU beams are precisely focused on a small region of diseased tissue to locally deposit high levels of energy.

  • Focused ultrasound may be used to generate highly localized heating to treat cysts and tumors (benign or malignant). This is known as Magnetic Resonance guided Focused Ultrasound (MRgFUS) or High Intensity Focused Ultrasound (HIFU). These procedures generally use lower frequencies than medical diagnostic ultrasound (from 0.7 to 2 MHz), but higher the frequency means lower the focusing energy. HIFU treatment is often guided by MRI.
  • Focused ultrasound may be used to dissolve kidney stones by lithotripsy.
  • Ultrasound may be used for cataract treatment by phacoemulsification.

Ideal temperature edit

The temperature of tissue at the focus will rise to between 65 and 85 °C, destroying the diseased tissue by coagulative necrosis. If tissue is elevated above the threshold of 60 °C for longer than 1 second this process is irreversible.[20] Each sonication (individual ultrasound energy deposition) treats a precisely defined portion of the targeted tissue. The entire therapeutic target is treated by using multiple sonications to create a volume of incompressible material, such as tap water.[21]

 

with the integral being over the treatment time, R=0.5 for temperatures over 43 °C and 0.25 for temperatures between 43 °C and 37 °C, a reference temperature of 43 °C, and time T is in minutes. The equations and methods described in this report are not intended to represent any clinical result, this is only an approach for thermal dose estimation in a incompressible material of just tap water; .[22]

As an ultrasound acoustic wave cannot propagates through the compressive tissue, such as rubber, human tissues part of it and the ultrasound energy will be turned to converted as heat, with focused beams, a very small region of heating can be achieved the part of shallow deep in tissues (usually on the order of 2~3 millimeters). Tissue occurs as a function of both the subtle shaking to which the water is heated and how long the part of water is exposed to this heat level in a metric referred to as "thermal dose". By focusing at more than one place or by scanning the focus, a volume can be thermally ablated.[23][24][25] Thermal doses of 120-240 min at 43 °C coagulate cellular protein and leads to irreversible tissue destruction.

There are some reports that HIFU could be applied to cancers to disrupt the tumor microenvironment and trigger an immune response, as well as possibly enhance the efficacy of immunotherapy.[26][27]

Mechanical edit

Inertial cavitation edit

At high enough acoustic intensities, cavitation (microbubbles forming and interacting with the ultrasound field) can occur. Microbubbles produced in the field oscillate and grow (due to factors including rectified diffusion), and can eventually implode (inertial or transient cavitation). During inertial cavitation, very high temperatures occur inside the bubbles, and the collapse during the rarefaction phase is associated with a shock wave and jets that can mechanically damage tissue.[28]

Stable cavitation edit

Stable cavitation creates microstreaming which induces high shear forces on cells and leads to apoptosis. Elaborating, bubbles produced by the vaporization of water due to acoustic forces oscillate under a low-pressure acoustic field. Strong streaming may cause cell damage but also reduces tissue temperature via convective heat loss.[29]

Theory edit

There are several ways to focus ultrasound—via a lens (for example, a polystyrene lens, parabola curve transducer, a phased array, etc. The special patents and very precise technology solve the problem. This can be determined using an exponential model of ultrasound attenuation. The ultrasound intensity profile is bounded by an exponentially decreasing function where the decrease in ultrasound is a function of distance traveled through tissue:

 

  is the initial intensity of the beam,   is the attenuation coefficient (in units of inverse length), and z is distance traveled through the attenuating medium (e.g. tissue).

In ideal model,  [30] is a measure of the power density of the heat absorbed from the ultrasound field. This demonstrates that tissue heating is proportional to intensity, and that intensity is inversely proportional to the area over which an ultrasound beam is spread—therefore, focusing the beam into a sharp point (i.e. increasing the beam intensity) creates a rapid temperature rise at the focus.[citation needed]

The ultrasound beam can be focused in these ways:

  • Geometrically, for example with a lens or with a spherically curved transducer.
  • Electronically, by adjusting the relative phases of elements in an array of transducers (a "phased array"). By dynamically adjusting the electronic signals to the elements of a phased array, the beam can be steered to different locations, and aberrations in the ultrasound beam due to tissue structures can be corrected.[citation needed]
  • Above ideal assumption is adopted with the condition of no reflection, no absorption and no diffusion of intermediate tissue.The ultrasound itself can penetrate the incompressive material such as tap water, sea water, but the compressive material such as air, rubber, human tissue, fat, fiber, hollow bone, fascia, those tissue are reflect, absorb and diffuse the ultrasound energy.

Beam delivery edit

Beam delivery consists of beam steering and image guidance. The beam has the ability to pass through overlying tissues without harm and focus on a localized area with size limit of 2-3 mm, that is determined the clinical frequency of the ultrasound. Following ablation a distinct boundary forms between healthy and necrotic tissue (width less than 50 microns).[31]

Beam steering edit

The most common transducer used is a concave focusing transducer with a fixed aperture and a fixed focal length.[31] Phased array transducers can also be used with different arrangements (flat/bowl).[31]

Image guidance edit

HIFU therapy requires careful monitoring and so it is usually performed in conjunction with other imaging techniques.

Pre-operative imaging, for instance CT and MRI, are usually used to identify general parameters of the target anatomy. Real-time imaging, on the other hand, is necessary for safe and accurate noninvasive targeting and therapy monitoring. Both MRI and Medical ultrasound imaging have been used for guidance in FUS treatment. These techniques are known as Magnetic Resonance guided Focused Ultrasound Surgery (MRgFUS)[32][33] and Ultrasound guided Focused Ultrasound Surgery (USgFUS) respectively.[4][34] MRgFUS is a 3D imaging technique which features high soft tissue contrast and provides information about temperature, thus allowing to monitor ablation. However, low frame rate makes this technique perform poorly in real-time imaging and high costs represent a significant limitation to its use.[35] USgFUS, differently, is a 2D imaging technique in which, although no system to provide quantitative information on temperature has been commercially developed so far, several benefits are exploited, such as high frame rate (up to 1000 images per second), low cost and minimal adverse health effects. Another reason why ultrasound is ideal for image guidance is it verifies the acoustic window in real time since it is the same modality as the therapy.[36] The implication of this is that if the target region is not visualized by ultrasound imaging before and during HIFU therapy, then it is unlikely that HIFU therapy will be effective in that specific region.[36] In addition, treatment outcomes can be estimated in real time through visual inspection of hyperechoic changes in standard B-mode images.[37]

References edit

  1. ^ Dubinsky TJ, Cuevas C, Dighe MK, Kolokythas O, Hwang JH (2008). "High-Intensity Focused Ultrasound: Current Potential and Oncologic Applications". American Journal of Roentgenology. 190 (1): 191–199. doi:10.2214/AJR.07.2671. ISSN 0361-803X. PMID 18094311.
  2. ^ Gelet A, Murat FJ, Poissonier L (2007). . European Oncological Disease. 1 (1): 60–2. Archived from the original on 4 October 2013. Retrieved 4 October 2013.
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  24. ^ Köhler MO, Mougenot C, Quesson B, Enholm J, Le Bail B, Laurent C, Moonen CT, Ehnholm GJ (2009). "Volumetric HIFU ablation under 3D guidance of rapid MRI thermometry". Medical Physics. 36 (8): 3521–35. Bibcode:2009MedPh..36.3521K. doi:10.1118/1.3152112. PMID 19746786.
  25. ^ Monteith SJ, Kassell NF, Goren O, Harnof S (2013). "Transcranial MR-guided focused ultrasound sonothrombolysis in the treatment of intracerebral hemorrhage". Neurosurgical Focus. 34 (5): E14. doi:10.3171/2013.2.FOCUS1313. PMID 23634918.
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  28. ^ Leighton T (1997). Ultrasound in food processing. Chapter 9: The principles of cavitation: Thomson Science, London, Blackie Academic and Professional. pp. 151–182.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location (link)
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  30. ^ Hariharan P, Myers MR, Banerjee RK (21 July 2007). "HIFU procedures at moderate intensities—effect of large blood vessels". Physics in Medicine and Biology. 52 (12): 3493–3513. Bibcode:2007PMB....52.3493H. doi:10.1088/0031-9155/52/12/011. PMID 17664556. S2CID 26124121.
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  32. ^ Kotopoulis S, Wang H, Cochran S, Postema M (2011). "Lithium niobate transducers for MRI-guided ultrasonic microsurgery" (PDF). IEEE Transactions on Ultrasonics, Ferroelectrics and Frequency Control. 58 (8): 1570–1576. doi:10.1109/TUFFC.2011.1984. PMID 21859576. S2CID 11382728.
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External links edit

  • Therapeutic Ultrasound at Curlie

focused, ultrasound, this, article, contains, content, that, written, like, advertisement, please, help, improve, removing, promotional, content, inappropriate, external, links, adding, encyclopedic, content, written, from, neutral, point, view, january, 2015,. This article contains content that is written like an advertisement Please help improve it by removing promotional content and inappropriate external links and by adding encyclopedic content written from a neutral point of view January 2015 Learn how and when to remove this template message High intensity focused ultrasound HIFU is a non invasive therapeutic technique 1 that uses non ionizing ultrasonic waves to heat or ablate tissue HIFU can be used to increase the flow of blood or lymph or to destroy tissue such as tumors via thermal and mechanical mechanisms Given the prevalence and relatively low cost of ultrasound generation mechanisms the premise of HIFU is that it is expected to be a non invasive and low cost therapy that can at least outperform care in the operating room Focused ultrasoundDiagram showing how HIFU can be used to destroy tissue in the body An acoustic lens is used to focus sound to a small point in the body The sound propagates through many layers of tissue Because of the focal gain only tissue at the focus is destroyed Other namesMagnetic resonance guided focused ultrasound surgery MRgFUS Focused Ultrasound Surgery FUS edit on Wikidata The technology is different from that used in ultrasonic imaging though lower frequencies and continuous rather than pulsed waves are used to achieve the necessary thermal doses However pulsed waves may also be used if mechanical rather than thermal damage is desired Acoustic lenses are often used to achieve the necessary intensity at the target tissue without damaging the surrounding tissue The ideal pattern diagram is the beam focusing of a magnifying glass of sunlight only the focal point of the magnifying glass has high temperature HIFU is combined with other imaging techniques such as medical ultrasound or MRI to enable guidance of the treatment and monitoring Contents 1 History 2 Medical uses 2 1 Neurological disorders 2 2 Cancers 2 2 1 Prostate 2 2 2 Liver 2 3 Prostate enlargement 3 Mechanism 3 1 Ideal temperature 3 2 Mechanical 3 2 1 Inertial cavitation 3 2 2 Stable cavitation 3 3 Theory 4 Beam delivery 4 1 Beam steering 4 2 Image guidance 5 References 6 External linksHistory editThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed April 2016 Learn how and when to remove this template message Studies on localized prostate cancer showed that after treatment progression free survival rates were high for low and intermediate risk patients with recurrent prostate cancer 2 The InsighTec ExAblate 2000 was the first MRgFUS system to obtain FDA market approval 3 Medical uses editThis section needs more reliable medical references for verification or relies too heavily on primary sources Please review the contents of the section and add the appropriate references if you can Unsourced or poorly sourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Focused ultrasound news newspapers books scholar JSTOR April 2016 nbsp There is no clear consensus on the boundaries between HIFU and other forms of therapeutic ultrasound In particular literature HIFU refers to the high levels of energy required to destroy tissue through ablation or cavitation although it is also sometimes used to describe lower intensity applications such as occupational therapy and physical therapy Either way HIFU is used to non invasively heat tissue deep in the body without the need for an incision 4 The main applications are the destruction of tissue caused by hypertharmia increasing perfusion and physical therapy The use of ultrasound in the treatment of musculoskeletal conditions is another use in the physiotherapy setting 5 Neurological disorders edit nbsp Frontal MRI four days after MRgFUS MRI guided high intensity focused ultrasound Left ventral intermediate nucleus Vim thalamotomy 79 year old man with essential tremor One of the first applications of HIFU was the treatment of Parkinson s disease in the 1940s Although ineffective at the time HIFU has the capacity to lesion pathology A focused ultrasound system is approved in Israel Canada Italy Korea and Russia to treat essential tremor 6 neuropathic pain 7 and Parkinsonian tremor 8 This approach enables treatment of the brain without an incision or radiation In 2016 the US Food and Drug Administration FDA approved Insightec s Exablate system to treat essential tremor 9 Treatment for other thalamocortical dysrhythmias and psychiatric conditions are under investigation 10 Cancers edit Prostate edit HIFU may be effective for detecting prostate cancer 11 12 13 Liver edit HIFU is studied in liver cancer and in many studies report a high response rate and positive outcome 14 During the treatment of metastasized liver cancer with HIFU immune responses have been observed in locations that are distant from the focal region 15 Prostate enlargement edit Treatment of prostate enlargement benign prostatic hyperplasia by HIFU from inside the intestine transrectal has turned out to be unsuccessful 16 17 In some countries not in USA HIFU has also been offered from the inside of the prostate that is via a catheter in the prostatic urethra Evidence as of 2019 is lacking 18 In England the National Institute for Health and Care Excellence NICE in 2018 classified the method as not recommended 19 Mechanism editThis section needs more reliable medical references for verification or relies too heavily on primary sources Please review the contents of the section and add the appropriate references if you can Unsourced or poorly sourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Focused ultrasound news newspapers books scholar JSTOR April 2016 nbsp HIFU beams are precisely focused on a small region of diseased tissue to locally deposit high levels of energy Focused ultrasound may be used to generate highly localized heating to treat cysts and tumors benign or malignant This is known as Magnetic Resonance guided Focused Ultrasound MRgFUS or High Intensity Focused Ultrasound HIFU These procedures generally use lower frequencies than medical diagnostic ultrasound from 0 7 to 2 MHz but higher the frequency means lower the focusing energy HIFU treatment is often guided by MRI Focused ultrasound may be used to dissolve kidney stones by lithotripsy Ultrasound may be used for cataract treatment by phacoemulsification Ideal temperature edit The temperature of tissue at the focus will rise to between 65 and 85 C destroying the diseased tissue by coagulative necrosis If tissue is elevated above the threshold of 60 C for longer than 1 second this process is irreversible 20 Each sonication individual ultrasound energy deposition treats a precisely defined portion of the targeted tissue The entire therapeutic target is treated by using multiple sonications to create a volume of incompressible material such as tap water 21 CEM totfRTreference Tdt displaystyle mathit CEM int t o t f R T mathrm reference T dt nbsp with the integral being over the treatment time R 0 5 for temperatures over 43 C and 0 25 for temperatures between 43 C and 37 C a reference temperature of 43 C and time T is in minutes The equations and methods described in this report are not intended to represent any clinical result this is only an approach for thermal dose estimation in a incompressible material of just tap water 22 As an ultrasound acoustic wave cannot propagates through the compressive tissue such as rubber human tissues part of it and the ultrasound energy will be turned to converted as heat with focused beams a very small region of heating can be achieved the part of shallow deep in tissues usually on the order of 2 3 millimeters Tissue occurs as a function of both the subtle shaking to which the water is heated and how long the part of water is exposed to this heat level in a metric referred to as thermal dose By focusing at more than one place or by scanning the focus a volume can be thermally ablated 23 24 25 Thermal doses of 120 240 min at 43 C coagulate cellular protein and leads to irreversible tissue destruction There are some reports that HIFU could be applied to cancers to disrupt the tumor microenvironment and trigger an immune response as well as possibly enhance the efficacy of immunotherapy 26 27 Mechanical edit Inertial cavitation edit At high enough acoustic intensities cavitation microbubbles forming and interacting with the ultrasound field can occur Microbubbles produced in the field oscillate and grow due to factors including rectified diffusion and can eventually implode inertial or transient cavitation During inertial cavitation very high temperatures occur inside the bubbles and the collapse during the rarefaction phase is associated with a shock wave and jets that can mechanically damage tissue 28 Stable cavitation edit Stable cavitation creates microstreaming which induces high shear forces on cells and leads to apoptosis Elaborating bubbles produced by the vaporization of water due to acoustic forces oscillate under a low pressure acoustic field Strong streaming may cause cell damage but also reduces tissue temperature via convective heat loss 29 Theory edit There are several ways to focus ultrasound via a lens for example a polystyrene lens parabola curve transducer a phased array etc The special patents and very precise technology solve the problem This can be determined using an exponential model of ultrasound attenuation The ultrasound intensity profile is bounded by an exponentially decreasing function where the decrease in ultrasound is a function of distance traveled through tissue I Ioe 2az displaystyle I I o e 2 alpha mathrm z nbsp Io displaystyle I o nbsp is the initial intensity of the beam a displaystyle alpha nbsp is the attenuation coefficient in units of inverse length and z is distance traveled through the attenuating medium e g tissue In ideal model I z 2aI Q displaystyle frac partial I partial mathrm z 2 alpha I Q nbsp 30 is a measure of the power density of the heat absorbed from the ultrasound field This demonstrates that tissue heating is proportional to intensity and that intensity is inversely proportional to the area over which an ultrasound beam is spread therefore focusing the beam into a sharp point i e increasing the beam intensity creates a rapid temperature rise at the focus citation needed The ultrasound beam can be focused in these ways Geometrically for example with a lens or with a spherically curved transducer Electronically by adjusting the relative phases of elements in an array of transducers a phased array By dynamically adjusting the electronic signals to the elements of a phased array the beam can be steered to different locations and aberrations in the ultrasound beam due to tissue structures can be corrected citation needed Above ideal assumption is adopted with the condition of no reflection no absorption and no diffusion of intermediate tissue The ultrasound itself can penetrate the incompressive material such as tap water sea water but the compressive material such as air rubber human tissue fat fiber hollow bone fascia those tissue are reflect absorb and diffuse the ultrasound energy Beam delivery editBeam delivery consists of beam steering and image guidance The beam has the ability to pass through overlying tissues without harm and focus on a localized area with size limit of 2 3 mm that is determined the clinical frequency of the ultrasound Following ablation a distinct boundary forms between healthy and necrotic tissue width less than 50 microns 31 Beam steering edit The most common transducer used is a concave focusing transducer with a fixed aperture and a fixed focal length 31 Phased array transducers can also be used with different arrangements flat bowl 31 Image guidance edit HIFU therapy requires careful monitoring and so it is usually performed in conjunction with other imaging techniques Pre operative imaging for instance CT and MRI are usually used to identify general parameters of the target anatomy Real time imaging on the other hand is necessary for safe and accurate noninvasive targeting and therapy monitoring Both MRI and Medical ultrasound imaging have been used for guidance in FUS treatment These techniques are known as Magnetic Resonance guided Focused Ultrasound Surgery MRgFUS 32 33 and Ultrasound guided Focused Ultrasound Surgery USgFUS respectively 4 34 MRgFUS is a 3D imaging technique which features high soft tissue contrast and provides information about temperature thus allowing to monitor ablation However low frame rate makes this technique perform poorly in real time imaging and high costs represent a significant limitation to its use 35 USgFUS differently is a 2D imaging technique in which although no system to provide quantitative information on temperature has been commercially developed so far several benefits are exploited such as high frame rate up to 1000 images per second low cost and minimal adverse health effects Another reason why ultrasound is ideal for image guidance is it verifies the acoustic window in real time since it is the same modality as the therapy 36 The implication of this is that if the target region is not visualized by ultrasound imaging before and during HIFU therapy then it is unlikely that HIFU therapy will be effective in that specific region 36 In addition treatment outcomes can be estimated in real time through visual inspection of hyperechoic changes in standard B mode images 37 References edit Dubinsky TJ Cuevas C Dighe MK Kolokythas O Hwang JH 2008 High Intensity Focused Ultrasound Current Potential and Oncologic Applications American Journal of Roentgenology 190 1 191 199 doi 10 2214 AJR 07 2671 ISSN 0361 803X PMID 18094311 Gelet A Murat FJ Poissonier L 2007 Recurrent Prostate Cancer After Radiotherapy Salvage Treatment by High intensity Focused Ultrasound European Oncological Disease 1 1 60 2 Archived from the original on 4 October 2013 Retrieved 4 October 2013 Food and Drug Administration Approval ExAblate 2000 System P040003 Food and Drug Administration Retrieved 2 December 2023 a b Dubinsky TJ Cuevas C Dighe MK Kolokythas O Hwang JH 2008 High Intensity Focused Ultrasound Current Potential and Oncologic Applications American Journal of Roentgenology 190 1 191 199 doi 10 2214 AJR 07 2671 ISSN 0361 803X PMID 18094311 Robertson VJ Baker KG 2001 A review of therapeutic ultrasound Effectiveness studies PDF Physical Therapy 81 7 1339 50 doi 10 1093 ptj 81 7 1339 PMID 11444997 Elias WJ Huss D Voss T Loomba J Khaled M Zadicario E Frysinger RC Sperling SA Wylie S Monteith SJ Druzgal J Shah BB Harrison M Wintermark M 2013 A Pilot Study of Focused Ultrasound Thalamotomy for Essential Tremor New England Journal of Medicine 369 7 640 8 doi 10 1056 NEJMoa1300962 PMID 23944301 Jeanmonod D Werner B Morel A Michels L Zadicario E Schiff G Martin E 2012 Transcranial magnetic resonance imaging guided focused ultrasound noninvasive central lateral thalamotomy for chronic neuropathic pain PDF Neurosurgical Focus 32 1 E1 doi 10 3171 2011 10 FOCUS11248 PMID 22208894 S2CID 2231685 Magara A Buhler R Moser D Kowalski M Pourtehrani P Jeanmonod D 2014 First experience with MR guided focused ultrasound in the treatment of Parkinson s disease Journal of Therapeutic Ultrasound 2 11 doi 10 1186 2050 5736 2 11 PMC 4266014 PMID 25512869 FDA News Release FDA approves first MRI guided focused ultrasound device to treat essential tremor FDA July 11 2016 Martin Fiori E 2014 Functional Neurosurgery with MR Guided HIFU Intraoperative Imaging and Image Guided Therapy New York Springer pp 591 599 doi 10 1007 978 1 4614 7657 3 45 ISBN 978 1 4614 7657 3 Chaussy CG Thuroff S April 2017 High Intensity Focused Ultrasound for the treatment of prostate cancer A Review Journal of Endourology 31 S1 S30 S37 doi 10 1089 end 2016 0548 PMID 28355119 Hu JC Laviana A Sedrakyan A 28 June 2016 High Intensity Focused Ultrasound for Prostate Cancer JAMA 315 24 2659 60 doi 10 1001 jama 2016 5002 PMID 27367874 Lepor H Gold S Wysock J 2018 Focal Ablation of Prostate Cancer Reviews in Urology 20 4 145 157 doi 10 3909 riu0809 inactive 31 January 2024 PMC 6375006 PMID 30787673 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a CS1 maint DOI inactive as of January 2024 link Ng KK Poon RT Chan SC Chok KS Cheung TT Tung H Chu F Tso WK Yu WC Lo CM Fan ST May 2011 High intensity focused ultrasound for hepatocellular carcinoma a single center experience Annals of Surgery 253 5 981 987 doi 10 1097 SLA 0b013e3182128a8b hdl 10722 135541 ISSN 1528 1140 PMID 21394012 S2CID 25603451 Mauri G Nicosia L Xu Z Di Pietro S Monfardini L Bonomo G Varano GM Prada F Della Vigna P Orsi F March 2018 Focused ultrasound tumour ablation and its potential to enhance immunological therapy to cancer The British Journal of Radiology 91 1083 doi 10 1259 bjr 20170641 ISSN 0007 1285 PMC 5965486 PMID 29168922 Madersbacher S Schatzl G Djavan B Stulnig T Marberger M 2000 Long term outcome of transrectal high intensity focused ultrasound therapy for benign prostatic hyperplasia Eur Urol 37 6 687 94 doi 10 1159 000020219 PMID 10828669 S2CID 46793601 Sommer G Pauly KB Holbrook A Plata J Daniel B Bouley D 2013 Applicators for magnetic resonance guided ultrasonic ablation of benign prostatic hyperplasia Invest Radiol 48 6 387 94 doi 10 1097 RLI 0b013e31827fe91e PMC 4045500 PMID 23462673 Salgaonkar VA Diederich CJ 2015 Catheter based ultrasound technology for image guided thermal therapy current technology and applications Int J Hyperth 31 2 203 15 doi 10 3109 02656736 2015 1006269 PMC 4659534 PMID 25799287 National Institute for Health and Care Excellence NICE Current care pathway for BPH August 2018 Zhou YF 10 January 2011 High intensity focused ultrasound in clinical tumor ablation World Journal of Clinical Oncology 2 1 8 27 doi 10 5306 wjco v2 i1 8 ISSN 2218 4333 PMC 3095464 PMID 21603311 Sapareto SA Dewey WC 1984 Thermal dose determination in cancer therapy International Journal of Radiation Oncology Biology Physics 10 6 787 800 doi 10 1016 0360 3016 84 90379 1 PMID 6547421 Mouratidis PX Rivens I Civale J Symonds Tayler R Haar Gt 1 January 2019 Relationship between thermal dose and cell death for rapid ablative and slow hyperthermic heating International Journal of Hyperthermia 36 1 228 242 doi 10 1080 02656736 2018 1558289 ISSN 0265 6736 PMID 30700171 Huisman M Lam MK Bartels LW Nijenhuis RJ Moonen CT Knuttel FM Verkooijen HM van Vulpen M van den Bosch MA 2014 Feasibility of volumetric MRI guided high intensity focused ultrasound MR HIFU for painful bone metastases Journal of Therapeutic Ultrasound 2 16 doi 10 1186 2050 5736 2 16 PMC 4193684 PMID 25309743 Kohler MO Mougenot C Quesson B Enholm J Le Bail B Laurent C Moonen CT Ehnholm GJ 2009 Volumetric HIFU ablation under 3D guidance of rapid MRI thermometry Medical Physics 36 8 3521 35 Bibcode 2009MedPh 36 3521K doi 10 1118 1 3152112 PMID 19746786 Monteith SJ Kassell NF Goren O Harnof S 2013 Transcranial MR guided focused ultrasound sonothrombolysis in the treatment of intracerebral hemorrhage Neurosurgical Focus 34 5 E14 doi 10 3171 2013 2 FOCUS1313 PMID 23634918 Haen SP Pereira PL Salih HR Rammensee HG Gouttefangeas C 2011 More Than Just Tumor Destruction Immunomodulation by Thermal Ablation of Cancer Clinical and Developmental Immunology 2011 1 19 doi 10 1155 2011 160250 PMC 3254009 PMID 22242035 Wu F 2013 High intensity focused ultrasound ablation and antitumor immune response The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America 134 2 1695 701 Bibcode 2013ASAJ 134 1695W doi 10 1121 1 4812893 PMID 23927210 Leighton T 1997 Ultrasound in food processing Chapter 9 The principles of cavitation Thomson Science London Blackie Academic and Professional pp 151 182 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location link Levario Diaz V Bhaskar P Galan MC Barnes AC 22 May 2020 Effect of acoustic standing waves on cellular viability and metabolic activity Scientific Reports 10 1 8493 Bibcode 2020NatSR 10 8493L doi 10 1038 s41598 020 65241 4 ISSN 2045 2322 PMC 7244593 PMID 32444830 Hariharan P Myers MR Banerjee RK 21 July 2007 HIFU procedures at moderate intensities effect of large blood vessels Physics in Medicine and Biology 52 12 3493 3513 Bibcode 2007PMB 52 3493H doi 10 1088 0031 9155 52 12 011 PMID 17664556 S2CID 26124121 a b c Izadifar Z Izadifar Z Chapman D Babyn P 7 February 2020 An Introduction to High Intensity Focused Ultrasound Systematic Review on Principles Devices and Clinical Applications Journal of Clinical Medicine 9 2 460 doi 10 3390 jcm9020460 ISSN 2077 0383 PMC 7073974 PMID 32046072 Kotopoulis S Wang H Cochran S Postema M 2011 Lithium niobate transducers for MRI guided ultrasonic microsurgery PDF IEEE Transactions on Ultrasonics Ferroelectrics and Frequency Control 58 8 1570 1576 doi 10 1109 TUFFC 2011 1984 PMID 21859576 S2CID 11382728 Medel R Monteith SJ Elias WJ Eames M Snell J Sheehan JP Wintermark M Jolesz FA Kassell NF 2012 Magnetic Resonance Guided Focused Ultrasound Surgery Neurosurgery 71 4 755 763 doi 10 1227 NEU 0b013e3182672ac9 ISSN 0148 396X PMC 4104674 PMID 22791029 Belzberg M Mahapatra S Perdomo Pantoja A Chavez F Morrison K Xiong KT Gamo NJ Restaino SA Thakor N Yazdi Y Iyer R Tyler B Theodore N Luciano MG Brem H Groves M Cohen AR Manbachi A 2020 Minimally invasive therapeutic ultrasound Ultrasound guided ultrasound ablation in neuro oncology Ultrasonics 108 12 106210 doi 10 1016 j ultras 2020 106210 PMC 8895244 PMID 32619834 Cafarelli A Mura M Diodato A Schiappacasse A Santoro M Ciuti G Menciassi A 25 29 August 2015 A computer assisted robotic platform for Focused Ultrasound Surgery Assessment of high intensity focused ultrasound delivery 37th Annual International Conference of the IEEE Engineering in Medicine and Biology Society EMBC pp 1311 1314 doi 10 1109 EMBC 2015 7318609 ISBN 978 1 4244 9271 8 PMID 26736509 S2CID 4194253 a b Chen PH Hsieh KS Huang CC 2017 An Acoustic Tracking Approach for Medical Ultrasound Image Simulator Journal of Medical and Biological Engineering 37 6 944 952 doi 10 1007 s40846 017 0258 9 ISSN 1609 0985 PMC 6208925 PMID 30416414 Ebbini ES Ter Haar G 2015 Ultrasound guided therapeutic focused ultrasound Current status and future directions International Journal of Hyperthermia 31 2 77 89 doi 10 3109 02656736 2014 995238 ISSN 0265 6736 PMID 25614047 S2CID 23590340 External links editTherapeutic Ultrasound at Curlie Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Focused ultrasound amp oldid 1201890959, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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