DocumentCode
1304269
Title
A preliminary evaluation of the effects of primary and secondary radiation forces on acoustic contrast agents
Author
Dayton, Paul A. ; Morgan, Karen E. ; Klibanov, Alexander L Sasha ; Brandenburger, Gary ; Nightingale, Kathryn R. ; Ferrara, Katherine W.
Author_Institution
Health Sci. Center, Virginia Univ., Charlottesville, VA, USA
Volume
44
Issue
6
fYear
1997
Firstpage
1264
Lastpage
1277
Abstract
Primary and secondary radiation forces result from pressure gradients in the incident and scattered ultrasonic fields. These forces and their dependence on experimental parameters are described, and the theory for primary radiation force is extended to consider a pulsed traveling wave. Both primary and secondary radiation forces are shown to have a significant effect on the flow of microbubbles through a small vessel during insonation. The primary radiation force produces displacement of microspheres across a 100 micron vessel radius for a small transmitted acoustic pressure. The displacement produced by primary radiation force is shown to display the expected linear dependence on the pulse repetition frequency and a nonlinear dependence on transmitted pressure. The secondary radiation force produces a reversible attraction and aggregation of microspheres with a significant attraction over a distance of approximately 100 microns. The magnitude of the secondary radiation force is proportional to the inverse of the squared separation distance, and thus two aggregates accelerate as they approach one another. We show that this force is sufficient to produce aggregates that remain intact for a physiologically appropriate shear rate. Brief interruption of acoustic transmission allows an immediate disruption of the aggregate.
Keywords
aggregation; bubbles; radiation pressure; ultrasonic scattering; acoustic contrast agent; acoustic pressure transmission; aggregation; insonation; microbubble flow; microsphere displacement; primary radiation force; pulsed traveling wave; secondary radiation force; shear rate; ultrasonic scattering; Acceleration; Acoustic pulses; Acoustic scattering; Aggregates; Arteries; Blood; Displays; Frequency; Resonance; Veins;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Ultrasonics, Ferroelectrics, and Frequency Control, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
0885-3010
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/58.656630
Filename
656630
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