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Low-Intensity Pulsed Ultrasound Useful in Emergencies for Brain Disorders

By HospiMedica International staff writers
Posted on 21 Sep 2011
The discovery that low-intensity, pulsed ultrasound can be used to noninvasively stimulate intact brain circuits holds promise for engineering rapid-response medical devices. More...
The investigators who made that discovery have now produced an in-depth article detailing this approach, which may one day lead to first-line therapies in combating life-threatening epileptic seizures.

Status epilepticus is a condition in which the brain is in a state of persistent seizure and which, if not halted, can lead to sudden unexplained death in epilepsy (SUDEP). But, as the recent article authored by Dr. William Tyler, an assistant professor with the Virginia Tech Carilion Research Institute (Roanoke, USA) and colleagues revealed that ultrasonic neuromodulation does not necessarily need to be focused to attenuate epileptic seizures, meaning that it can be quickly applied in neurocritical care situations. “Imagine a device like an automatic external defibrillator except for the brain,” said first author Dr. Yusuf Tufail, who is now a postdoctoral associate at the Salk Institute for Biological Sciences.

Published in the September 2011 issue of the journal Nature Protocols, the study’s findings provide a guide for the further development and clinical application of ultrasonic neuromodulation. The authors Drs. Yusuf Tufail, Anna Yoshihiro, and Monica M. Li of Arizona State University’s School of Life Sciences (Tempe, USA); Sandipan Pati of Barrow Neurological Institute at St. Joseph’s Hospital and Medical Center (Phoenix, AZ, USA) and corresponding author Dr. Tyler also published their earlier research into the feasibility of this approach in the journal Neuron in 2010.

Tyler and his research group have spent several years developing noninvasive methods for brain stimulation employing low-intensity, low-frequency (LILFU) ultrasound. “Much of our time had been spent on understanding the biological effects of LILFU on intact brain circuits and how to control neural activity using LILFU,” Dr. Tyler said.

The team has observed that the mechanical bioeffects of ultrasound are indeed capable of stimulating neuronal activity, meaning that ultrasound could join other therapies for neurological disorders namely, implanted electrodes, such as those used in deep-brain stimulation, and external magnetic stimulators used for transcranial magnetic stimulation to treat disorders such as Parkinson’s disease, major depression, and dystonia. The major advantage of using ultrasound for brain stimulation is that it can confer spatial resolution at millimeter precision while being focused through the skull to deep-brain regions without the need for invasive brain surgery, Dr. Tyler reported.

“We have also shown that ultrasound can be used to stimulate synaptic transmission between groups of neurons within the brain in a manner similar to conventional implanted stimulating electrodes without generating significant heating of the brain tissue,” noted Dr. Tyler.

“Further studies are required to fully elucidate the many potential mechanisms underlying the ability of ultrasound to stimulate neuronal activity in the intact brain,” the article stated. However, while using ultrasound for brain stimulation represents a powerful new tool for clinical neuroscience, there are potential concerns, since high-intensity ultrasound is also capable of destroying biological tissues, the researchers wrote.

The article reports that ultrasound has been used for many hours across many weeks, “stimulating cellular circuits in the living brain without producing damage in mice as assessed with cellular, histological, ultrastructural, and behavioral methods.” The researchers added a note of caution: “Additional investigations across animal species and dosage levels are required, however, before the safety can be fully ascertained.”
Moving this technology forward will require scientists, engineers, and physicians spanning many disciplines. The motivation for the article, according to the authors, is to disseminate basic methods for conducting ultrasonic neuromodulation. “There is a major need for increased open communication among engineers designing ultrasound-based medical devices, neuroscientists studying the core biological effects of ultrasound, and clinicians implementing ultrasound for therapeutic interventions,” stated Dr. Tyler.

The study poses specific questions needing to be addressed, such as how ultrasound affects neurons on a molecular and cellular level, how to correct for impedance mismatches between skin and skull interfaces, and the need for characterizing safety across different exposure times, applications, and disease states.

The research provides the provocative demonstration that ultrasonic neuromodulation is capable of attenuating seizure activity during pharmacologically induced status epilepticus in lab rats. “While other research groups have reported that focused ultrasound can modulate seizure activity in the brain, the approaches used in those earlier studies require timely preparations and the implementation of MRI to focus the ultrasound in an approach known as magnetic resonance-guided focused ultrasound,” concluded Dr. Tyler. “Our findings show that clinicians may not need to take such complicated, costly, and time-consuming approaches to treating patients in critical situations.”

Related Links:
Virginia Tech Carilion Research Institute
Arizona State University’s School of Life Sciences
Barrow Neurological Institute at St. Joseph’s Hospital and Medical Center


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