Ultrasound-induced heating in a foetal skull bone phantom and its dependence on beam width and perfusion

Abstract

The cooling effect of single and multiple perfusing channels has been measured in a model of human foetal skull bone heated by wide and narrow beams of simulated pulsed spectral Doppler ultrasound (US). A focussed transducer operating with a centre frequency of 3.5 MHz, that emitted pulses of 5.7 MUs duration with a repetition frequency of 8 kHz, was used. This produced a beam of power 100 Β± 2 mW with –6 dB diameters of 3.1 mm and 7.8 mm at 9 cm and 6 cm, respectively, from the transducer face. Arterial perfusion was simulated by allowing distilled water to flow in a large single channel or a grid of fine channels near the heated bone target. This study has established that: 1. perfusion-induced cooling is significantly enhanced when the bone phantom is heated by a wide rather than a narrow beam; 2. irrespective of the US beam width, a grid of small channels is more effective in cooling a heated bone target than a single larger diameter channel with the same volume flow rate; 3. the measured temperature rise and rate of temperature rise support the prediction of inverse proportionality to the US beam width; and 4. the perfusion time constants determined in our phantom model are 2 to 30 times larger than that assumed for the thermal index (TIB) algorithm

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