论文标题
快速,选择性的超分辨率超声在体内,具有可声音转换的纳米圆环
Fast and selective super-resolution ultrasound in vivo with sono-switchable nanodroplets
论文作者
论文摘要
微循环灌注是组织发育,维持和病理的关键。因此,其具有高时空分辨率的测量值是有价值的,但在深层组织中仍然是一个挑战。超声定位显微镜(ULM)提供了很高的时空分辨率,但使用微泡需要较低的对比度浓度,较长的收集时间,几乎没有控制气泡的空间和时间分布。本研究是第一个证明声波稀疏激活的定位显微镜(AWSALM)和快速awsalm用于体内超级分辨率超声成像,从而提供对比度和血管选择性的对比度。测试了三种不同的可声造影剂的配方。我们证明了它们在推荐的安全限制内很好地与超声机械指数一起使用,以使按需稀疏开关以非常高的试剂浓度。我们生成兔肾脏脉管系统的超定位图,采集时间在5.5 s至0.25 s之间,空间分辨率提高了4倍。我们介绍了AWSALM在可视化特定的血管分支和下游微脉管系统方面具有独特的选择性,并且我们在收缩期和舒张期的超定位肾脏结构中显示了超定位的肾脏结构。总而言之,我们证明了使用超声和可声开关的纳米型在体内快速和选择性测量体内微血管动力学的可行性。
Perfusion by the microcirculation is key to the development, maintenance and pathology of tissue. Its measurement with high spatiotemporal resolution is consequently valuable but remains a challenge in deep tissue. Ultrasound Localization Microscopy (ULM) provides very high spatiotemporal resolution but the use of microbubbles requires low contrast agent concentrations, a long acquisition time, and gives little control over the spatial and temporal distribution of the bubbles. The present study is the first to demonstrate Acoustic Wave Sparsely-Activated Localization Microscopy (AWSALM) and fast-AWSALM for in vivo super-resolution ultrasound imaging, offering contrast on demand and vascular selectivity. Three different formulations of sono-switchable contrast agents were tested. We demonstrate their use with ultrasound mechanical indices well within recommended safety limits to enable fast on-demand sparse switching at very high agent concentrations. We produce super-localization maps of the rabbit renal vasculature with acquisition times between 5.5 s and 0.25 s, and an 4-fold improvement in spatial resolution. We present the unique selectivity of AWSALM in visualizing specific vascular branches and downstream microvasculature, and we show super-localized kidney structures in systole and diastole with fast-AWSALM. In conclusion we demonstrate the feasibility of fast and selective measurement of microvascular dynamics in vivo with subwavelength resolution using ultrasound and sono-switchable nanodroplets.