• DocumentCode
    1365991
  • Title

    Microbubble characterization through acoustically induced deflation

  • Author

    Guidi, Francesco ; Vos, Hendrik J. ; Mori, Riccardo ; de Jong, Nico ; Tortoli, Piero

  • Author_Institution
    Dept. of Electron. & Telecommun., Univ. degli Studi di Firenze, Florence, Italy
  • Volume
    57
  • Issue
    1
  • fYear
    2010
  • Firstpage
    193
  • Lastpage
    202
  • Abstract
    Ultrasound contrast agents (UCA) populations are typically polydisperse and contain microbubbles with radii over a given range. Although the behavior of microbubbles of certain sizes might be masked by the behavior of others, the acoustic characterization of UCA is typically made on full populations. In this paper, we have combined acoustic and optical methods to investigate the response of isolated lipid-shelled microbubbles to low-pressure (49 and 62 kPa peak negative pressure) ultrasound tone bursts. These bursts induced slow deflation of the microbubbles. The experimental setup included a microscope connected to a fast camera acquiring one frame per pulse transmitted by a single-element transducer. The behavior of each bubble was measured at multiple frequencies, by cyclically changing the transmission frequency over the range of 2 to 4 MHz during subsequent pulse repetition intervals. The bubble echoes were captured by a second transducer and coherently recorded. More than 50 individual microbubbles were observed. Microbubbles with radii larger than 3 ?m did not experience any size reduction. Smaller bubbles slowly deflated, generally until the radius reached a value around 1.4 ?m, independent of the initial microbubble size. The detected pressure amplitude backscattered at 2.5 cm distance was very low, decreasing from about 5 Pa down to 1 Pa at 2 MHz as the bubbles deflated. The resonant radius was evaluated from the echo amplitude normalized with respect to the geometrical cross section. At 2-MHz excitation, deflating microbubbles showed highest normalized echo when the radius was 2.2 ?m while at higher excitation frequencies, the resonant radius was lower. The relative phase shift of the echo during the deflation process was also measured. It was found to exceed ?/2 in all cases. A heuristic procedure based on the analysis of multiple bubbles of a same population was used to estimate the undamped natural frequency. It was found that a microbubble of 1.7 ?m - as an undamped natural frequency of 2 MHz. The difference between this size and the resonant radius is discussed as indicative of significant damping.
  • Keywords
    acoustic measurement; biomedical materials; biomedical ultrasonics; ultrasonic imaging; acoustic characterisation methods; acoustically induced deflation; bubble geometrical cross section; bubble resonant radius; bubble undamped natural frequency; echo relative phase shift; isolated lipid shelled microbubbles; low pressure ultrasound tone bursts; microbubble characterization; normalised echo amplitude; optical characterisation methods; slow microbubble deflation; ultrasound contrast agents; Acoustic pulses; Cameras; Frequency estimation; Frequency measurement; Microscopy; Optical pulses; Pulse measurements; Resonance; Ultrasonic imaging; Ultrasonic transducers; Contrast Media; Microbubbles; Particle Size; Radiation Dosage; Sonication; Ultrasonography;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Journal_Title
    Ultrasonics, Ferroelectrics, and Frequency Control, IEEE Transactions on
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • ISSN
    0885-3010
  • Type

    jour

  • DOI
    10.1109/TUFFC.2010.1398
  • Filename
    5361542