Effects of high-intensity focused ultrasound on nerve conduction
Autor: | Shahram Vaezy, James W. Little, Jessica L. Foley |
---|---|
Rok vydání: | 2008 |
Předmět: |
medicine.medical_specialty
Time Factors Physiology Ultrasonic Therapy medicine.medical_treatment Transducers Neural Conduction Action Potentials Temporal muscle Rats Sprague-Dawley Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience Physiology (medical) Reaction Time medicine Animals Spasticity Muscle Skeletal Ultrasonography Interventional Pound (force) business.industry Ultrasound Dose-Response Relationship Radiation Nerve Block Sciatic Nerve High-intensity focused ultrasound Rats Surgery Intensity (physics) Electrophysiology Neurology (clinical) Sciatic nerve medicine.symptom business Nuclear medicine |
Zdroj: | Muscle & Nerve. 37:241-250 |
ISSN: | 1097-4598 0148-639X |
DOI: | 10.1002/mus.20932 |
Popis: | The effects of various exposures (intensity, duration) of high- intensity focused ultrasound (HIFU) on sciatic nerve conduction were inves- tigated in vivo in rats. The objective was to identify HIFU exposures that produce biological effects ranging from partial to complete conduction block, indicating potential use of HIFU as an alternative to current clinical methods of inducing nerve conduction block. In the study, 26 nerves were exposed and treated with 5-s applications of 5.7-MHZ HIFU with acoustic intensities of 390, 2,255, 3,310, and 7,890 W/cm 2 (spatial peak, temporal peak). Com- pound muscle action potentials (CMAPs), in response to electrical stimula- tion of the nerve proximal to the HIFU site, were recorded from the plantar foot muscles immediately before and after HIFU treatment and 2 and 4 h after treatment. Furthermore, a preliminary long-term investigation was per- formed on 27 nerves with the same four sets of HIFU parameters. CMAPs were measured at the survival endpoint for each animal (7 or 28 days after treatment). For nerves treated with the three lower exposures, CMAPs decreased initially withi n4ho r 7days after HIFU treatment and then recovered to their baseline level at 28 days after treatment. For the highest exposure, however, CMAPs remained absent even 28 days after treatment. These exposure-dependent effects of HIFU on nerve function suggest its future potential as a novel treatment for severe spasticity and pain. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
Externí odkaz: |