Author :
Yin, Xiangtao ; Epstein, Laurence M. ; Hynynen, Kullervo
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Radiol., Brigham & Women´´s Hosp., Boston, MA, USA
Abstract :
This simulation study proposes a noninvasive, transesophageal cardiac-thermal ablation using a planar ultrasound phased array (1 MHz, 60 × 10 mm2, 0.525 mm interelement spacing, 114 × 20 elements). Thirty-nine foci in cardiac muscle were defined at 20, 40, and 60-mm distances and at various angles from the transducer surface to simulate the accessible posterior left atrial wall through the esophageal wall window. The ultrasound pressure distribution and the resulting thermal effect in a volume of 60 × 80 × 80 mm3, including esophagus and cardiac muscle, were simulated for each focus. For 1, 10, and 20-s sonications with 60°C and 70°C peak temperatures in cardiac muscle and without thermal damage in esophageal wall, the transducer acoustic powers were 105-727, 28-117, 21-79 W and 151-1044, 40-167, 30-114 W, respectively. The simulated lesions (thermal dose in equivalent minutes at 43°C ≥240 minutes) at these foci had lengths of 1-6, 3-11, 3-13 mm and 3-15, 5-19, 6-23 mm, respectively, and widths of 1-4, 2-7, 3-9 mm and 3-9, 4-13, 4-17 mm, respectively. As a first step toward feasibility, controllable tissue coagulation in cardiac tissue without damage to the esophagus was demonstrated numerically.
Keywords :
biomedical ultrasonics; biothermics; cardiology; coagulation; muscle; 0.525 mm; 1 MHz; 1 s; 10 s; 2-D focused ultrasound phased array; 20 mm; 20 s; 21 to 1044 W; 40 mm; 43 degC; 60 degC; 60 mm; 70 degC; cardiac muscle; controllable tissue coagulation; esophageal wall; noninvasive transesophageal cardiac thermal ablation; planar ultrasound phased array; posterior left atrial wall; sonications; thermal effect; ultrasound pressure distribution; Acoustic transducers; Coagulation; Esophagus; Lesions; Muscles; Phased arrays; Temperature; Ultrasonic imaging; Ultrasonic transducer arrays; Ultrasonic transducers; Animals; Body Temperature; Cardiac Surgical Procedures; Computer Simulation; Equipment Design; Equipment Failure Analysis; Heart; Humans; Models, Cardiovascular; Surgical Procedures, Minimally Invasive; Therapy, Computer-Assisted; Transducers; Treatment Outcome; Ultrasonic Therapy;
Journal_Title :
Ultrasonics, Ferroelectrics, and Frequency Control, IEEE Transactions on