Urinary stone lithotripsy critically depends on the presence of cavitation nuclei at the stone surface. We hypothesized that introduction of stone-targeting microbubbles could increase cavitation activity at a stone surface sufficiently to allow stone erosion and fragmentation at peak negative pressures much lower than in acoustic energy-based urinary stone interventions with induced cavitation nuclei alone. Gas-filled microbubbles were produced with calcium-binding moieties incorporated into an encapsulating lipid shell. Stone surface coverage with these targeting microbubbles was found to approach an optimal (considering microbubble expansion during insonation) range of 5–15% with incubation times of three minutes or less. Using high-speed photomicroscopy, we observe bound microbubbles expanding 10- to 30-fold under insonation with quasi-collimated sources at mechanical indexes below 1.9. For observed stand-off parameters in the range of 0.2–0.6, the modeled collapse-generated shockwaves exceed 100 MPa. In swine model studies with these targeting microbubbles, stone fragmentation into passable fragments occurs with treatment times around 30 minutes, while post-treatment examination of ureters and kidneys shows no evidence of urothelium damage or renal parenchymal hemorrhage. The stone-targeting microbubbles reported on here have formed the basis for a new non-invasive urinary stone treatment which recently entered human clinical trials.
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March 2018
Meeting abstract. No PDF available.
March 01 2018
Urinary stone erosion and fragmentation under low-intensity quasi-collimated ultrasound using gas-filled microbubbles with stone-targeting lipid shells Free
Yuri A. Pishchalnikov;
Yuri A. Pishchalnikov
Applaud Medical, Inc., 953 Indiana St., San Francisco, CA 94107, [email protected]
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William Behnke-Parks;
William Behnke-Parks
Applaud Medical, Inc., 953 Indiana St., San Francisco, CA 94107, [email protected]
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Matt Mellema;
Matt Mellema
Applaud Medical, Inc., 953 Indiana St., San Francisco, CA 94107, [email protected]
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Matt Hopcroft;
Matt Hopcroft
Applaud Medical, Inc., 953 Indiana St., San Francisco, CA 94107, [email protected]
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Alice Luong;
Alice Luong
Applaud Medical, Inc., 953 Indiana St., San Francisco, CA 94107, [email protected]
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Tim Colonius;
Tim Colonius
Dept. of Mech. and Civil Eng., California Inst. of Technol., Pasadena, CA
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Kazuki Maeda;
Kazuki Maeda
Dept. of Mech. and Civil Eng., California Inst. of Technol., Pasadena, CA
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Kyle Morrison;
Kyle Morrison
Sonic Concepts, Inc., Bothell, WA
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Daniel Laser
Daniel Laser
Applaud Medical Inc., San Francisco, CA
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Yuri A. Pishchalnikov
William Behnke-Parks
Matt Mellema
Matt Hopcroft
Alice Luong
Tim Colonius
Kazuki Maeda
Kyle Morrison
Daniel Laser
Applaud Medical, Inc., 953 Indiana St., San Francisco, CA 94107, [email protected]
J. Acoust. Soc. Am. 143, 1861 (2018)
Citation
Yuri A. Pishchalnikov, William Behnke-Parks, Matt Mellema, Matt Hopcroft, Alice Luong, Tim Colonius, Kazuki Maeda, Kyle Morrison, Daniel Laser; Urinary stone erosion and fragmentation under low-intensity quasi-collimated ultrasound using gas-filled microbubbles with stone-targeting lipid shells. J. Acoust. Soc. Am. 1 March 2018; 143 (3_Supplement): 1861. https://doi.org/10.1121/1.5036106
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