This disclosure relates to ultrasound, and in particular, to high-intensity focused ultrasound.
Transducers designed for therapeutic ultrasound applications deliver therapeutic power levels through piezoelectric ceramics such as PZT (Lead Zirconate Titanate) or through PZT/polymer composites. The transducer consists of a single piezoelectric element or multiple elements. Electrodes are connected to each piezoelectric element to generate ultrasound waves and to control wave properties such as frequency, amplitude and phase of ultrasound waves. The single element transducer has a fixed focal length that generates a fixed focal position, while the phased array (with multiple elements) transducer possesses the ability to steer the focus position by tuning each element's phase, which is called beam forming.
Therapeutic ultrasound is a minimally invasive or non-invasive method for depositing acoustic energy into tissue. The most common therapeutic application for an ultrasound transducer is to deliver focused ultrasound or High Intensity Focused Ultrasound (HIFU) to heat and destroy pathogenic tissue or to help drug delivery and release inside the body. Therefore, a therapeutic ultrasound transducer is designed to deliver acoustic energy through multiple layers of human skin, fat, muscle and soft tissues and to focus an acoustic beam at one specific zone under such layers. The precision with which the focus position is steered the energy level at the focus position are critical. Moreover, dynamic focusing of the transducer is required to track and target tumors in the moving organ, e.g. liver tumors.
It is an object of this invention to provide a transducer having a wide focus-steering range in two dimensions.
It is a further object to use a dual-curvature phased array transducer in a HIFU (high-intensity focused ultrasound) medical system and to provide a method to determine the ratio of radii of two curvatures.
These and other objects of the invention will be understood by those skilled in the art with reference to the following summary, detailed description, and the attached drawings.
A transducer for use with a high intensity focused ultrasound medical system comprises a plurality of transducer elements that are made from piezocomposite material. These transducer elements are bonded together in turn with an adhesive and transducer elements deployed along a surface of a curved cylindrical geometric structure with two curvatures. A plurality of electrodes are arranged on the transducer for exciting the transducer elements in different phases to emit ultrasonic waves in response to electrical signals applied to the electrodes to steer the ultrasonic waves so as to form a common focus center in a desired heating area.
Other and further aspects and features of the invention will be evident from reading the following detailed description of the drawings, which is intended to illustrate, not limit, the invention.
Various embodiments of the present invention are described and illustrated herein with reference to the drawings in which like items are indicated by the same reference, in which:
When a single element HIFU transducer is employed to deliver energy over a target region, typically a mechanical motion control is used to move the focal zone of the transducer. More advanced designs of HIFU transducers use a phased array transducer. Each transducer element in the phased array is a small and independent transducer. Each transducer element is bonded together in turn with epoxy or other adhesives on a surface. Those transducers are connected to electrodes so that the relative phases of elements in the array can be electrically adjusted. Each element in the array is dynamically adjusted to deliver an acoustic wave with a different phase. Different phases from different elements create constructive interference of the wave fronts. As a result, delivered energy can be focused at different depths and angles and the position of the focal zone can be controlled.
The principle of a phased array is shown in
Other possible control results are shown in
In accordance of present invention, a dual-curvature (DC) phased array HIFU transducer is proposed and its feasibility proven via the numerical simulations.
As shown in
An embodiment of the present invention is shown in
The DC phased array HIFU transducer as shown in
More detailed design information to implement the foregoing embodiments follows.
First, the number of elements is determined by consideration of the ability to focus steering and by the cost of an amplifier. Theoretically, the more elements there are, the better the array becomes at steering its focus. Nonetheless, more elements increase the complexity and cost of the phase and power generator. In the case of the liver tumor therapy, a minimum number of elements is required to make the steering range of the DC transducer sufficient for tracking a moving tumor.
Second, in view of the direction of movement and displacement of the liver tumor during a patient's respiration, more elements are arranged in the X direction of the DC transducer to provide a wide range for steering the focus in the head-to-toe direction. Additionally, to reduce the number of channels and the overall cost of the power amplifier, one can utilize symmetry to simplify control of the elements. In one example, the elements in the Y direction are connected in pairs and symmetrically with respect to the center line of the DC transducer along the X-axis.
Third, in order to avoid skin burn during the HIFU sonications, the DC transducer preferably has a wide aperture. Moreover, the surface acoustic intensity, defined as the acoustic power of total elements divided by the aperture area, restricts the aperture area. This surface acoustic intensity depends on material properties of the piezoelectrical/piezocomposite material.
Fourth, the length, L, height, H, and the radii of two curvatures, R.sub.1, R.sub.2 of the DC transducer as shown in
TABLE 1 shows one example of dimensions of a DC phased array HIFU transducer
It should be noted that in one embodiment, among a total 512 elements there are 64 independently-driven elements in the X direction and 8 symmetrically driven elements in the Y direction.
To be effective, the absorbed acoustic power at the desired focal point should be greater than a certain amount. A numerical simulation of energy delivering and absorption is beneficial to the design of the transducer according to this invention. Here by using the Rayleigh-Sommerfeld principle to integrate the contribution of each point source on the surface of the transducer, the absorbed acoustic power deposition q is given as
where α is the ultrasound absorption coefficient of tissue, p is the ultrasonic pressure, ρ is the tissue density, and c is the speed of sound in tissue. Values for α, ρ, and c used in the simulation were 8.86 Np/m at 1 MHz, 1000 kg/m.sup.3, and 1500 m/s. The driving signals for the transducer elements that produce a specific focused pattern are calculated by a pseudo inverse method, and the driving frequency is 1 MHz.
The results of simulation, as shown in
Moreover, the results of evaluating the X-axial focus-steering ability of the DC transducer are shown in
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Entry |
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Lin, Che-Yu, “Curved Cylindrical Ultrasound Phased Array for Liver Tumor Therapy,” Institute of Biomedical Engineering , College of Engineering and College of Medicine, National Taiwan University, Jul. 2008 (117 pages) English Abstract. |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20110034808 A1 | Feb 2011 | US |