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Variables controlling contrast generation in a urinary bladder model
- Source :
- The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America. 103(6)
- Publication Year :
- 1998
-
Abstract
- An ultrasound system has been developed to generate microbubbles in vivo for use as ultrasound contrast agent. Possible application include diagnosis of reflux in the urinary tract. In experiments designed to elucidate the contrast microbubble generation process, acoustic bursts (at 1.8 MHz, 125 ms) were propagated through a latex rubber balloon, modeled after a rabbit urinary bladder, containing fluids of various air and carbon dioxide saturations and concentrations of cavitation nuclei (0.198-micron-diam polystyrene particles). The peak rarefactional pressure threshold for contrast microbubble generation, as visualized with a diagnostic ultrasound system, decreased approximately a factor of 2 for increasing particle concentration from 10(8) to 10(10) particles/cc, with the lowest threshold of 5.24 MPa. For samples with gas saturations below 50% and 10(10) particles/cc, the average thresholds were at least twice as high as those of more saturated fluids (with mean threshold for saturated fluids of 6.45 MPa), and samples containing CO2 had considerably lower thresholds than respective under-saturations in air. At a fixed pressure amplitude, echogenicity tended to increase with both increasing particle concentration and gas saturation; this was more favorable for samples containing CO2. Even in a restricted-nuclei environment such as the urinary bladder, generation of vaporous cavitation should be possible; however, subsequently, abundant gas is needed to grow vaporous bubbles to persistent and imageable sizes, to assist in the diagnosis of urinary reflux.
- Subjects :
- Urinary bladder
Acoustics and Ultrasonics
business.industry
Ultrasound
Urinary Bladder
Echogenicity
chemistry.chemical_compound
medicine.anatomical_structure
Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous)
chemistry
Cavitation
Carbon dioxide
Microbubbles
medicine
Particle
Animals
Rabbits
Saturation (chemistry)
business
Biomedical engineering
Ultrasonography
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 00014966
- Volume :
- 103
- Issue :
- 6
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....a312c1f199f669cd8be156a4e79faf08