Publications by authors named "Robin Cleveland"

Both the biological effects and acoustic emissions generated by cavitation are functions of bubble dynamics. Monitoring of acoustic emissions is therefore desirable to improve treatment safety and efficacy. The relationship between the emission spectra and bubble dynamics is, however, complex.

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Bacterial biofilms represent a major challenge for effective antibiotic therapy as they confer physical and functional changes that protect bacteria from their surrounding environment. In this work, focused ultrasound in combination with cavitation nuclei was used to disrupt biofilms of Staphylococcus aureus and Pseudomonas aeruginosa, both of which are on the World Health Organization's priority list for new antimicrobial research. Approach: Single species biofilms were exposed to ultrasound (0.

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The rheological properties of porcine heart, kidney, liver and brain were measured using dynamic oscillatory shear tests over a range of frequencies and shear strains. Frequency sweep tests were performed from 0.1 Hz to a maximum of 9.

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Agarose gels are often used as a tissue mimic. The goal of this work was to determine the appropriate agarose concentrations that result in mechanical properties that match three different porcine organs. Strain tests were carried out with an amplitude varying from 0.

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In this study, the viscoelastic properties of porcine kidney in the upper, middle and lower poles were investigated using oscillatory shear tests. The viscoelastic properties were extracted in the form of the storage modulus and loss modulus in the frequency and time domain. Measurements were taken as a function of frequency from 0.

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This article describes a method of manipulating acoustic fields using transmission through foam gratings. The approach is investigated with an analytical model, a numerical model simulating full wave ultrasound propagation through the gratings, and experimental measurements. A grating is demonstrated that mimics a conventional ultrasound lens, modulating the phase of transmitted ultrasound while maximizing the transmitted amplitude.

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Article Synopsis
  • Transcranial ultrasound stimulation (TUS) is being explored as a non-invasive method to precisely modulate deep brain structures, but its safety, effectiveness for cognitive functions, and potential auditory interference are still debated.
  • The study aimed to evaluate if TUS could enhance higher-order visual functions specifically in the brain's motion processing area while minimizing auditory distractions.
  • Results showed that TUS improved participants' accuracy and response times in visual tasks, altered EEG readings related to those tasks, and did not cause any harmful effects, confirming TUS's potential for cognitive modulation.
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Abdominal aortic aneurysms (AAA) are associated with systemic inflammation and endothelial dysfunction. We previously reported flow mediated dilatation (FMD) of the brachial artery as a predictor of AAA growth. We hence hypothesised that other physical characteristics of the brachial artery correlate with AAA growth.

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Background: Transcranial ultrasound stimulation (TUS) is emerging as a potentially powerful, non-invasive technique for focal brain stimulation. Recent animal work suggests, however, that TUS effects may be confounded by indirect stimulation of early auditory pathways.

Objective: We aimed to investigate in human participants whether TUS elicits audible sounds and if these can be masked by an audio signal.

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Passive acoustic mapping (PAM) techniques have been developed for the purposes of detecting, localizing, and quantifying cavitation activity during therapeutic ultrasound procedures. Implementation with conventional diagnostic ultrasound arrays has allowed planar mapping of bubble acoustic emissions to be overlaid with B-mode anatomical images, with a variety of beamforming approaches providing enhanced resolution at the cost of extended computation times. However, no passive signal processing techniques implemented to date have overcome the fundamental physical limitation of the conventional diagnostic array aperture that results in point spread functions with axial/lateral beamwidth ratios of nearly an order of magnitude.

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Penetration of nanoscale therapeutic agents into the extracellular matrix (ECM) of a tumor is a limiting factor for the sufficient delivery of drugs in tumors. Ultrasound (US) in combination with microbubbles causing cavitation is reported to improve delivery of nanoparticles (NPs) and drugs to tumors. Acoustic radiation force (ARF) could also enhance the penetration of NPs in tumor ECM.

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Ultrasonic neuromodulation is a rapidly growing field, in which low-intensity ultrasound (US) is delivered to nervous system tissue, resulting in transient modulation of neural activity. This review summarizes the findings in the central and peripheral nervous systems from mechanistic studies in cell culture to cognitive behavioral studies in humans. The mechanisms by which US mechanically interacts with neurons and could affect firing are presented.

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Cellular membranes are, in general, impermeable to macromolecules (herein referred to as macrodrugs, e.g., recombinant protein, expression plasmids, or mRNA), which is a major barrier for clinical translation of macrodrug-based therapies.

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The optical properties of tissue change during thermal ablation. Multi-modal methods such as acousto-optic (AO) and photo-acoustic (PA) imaging may provide a real-time, direct measure of lesion formation. Baseline changes in optical properties have been previously measured over limited ranges of thermal dose for tissues exposed to a temperature-controlled water bath, however, there is scant data for optical properties of lesions created by HIFU.

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The angular spectrum method (ASM) is an effective tool for propagating wave fields between parallel planes through decomposition of the field into a series of independent plane waves. One source of error is interference from mirror sources introduced through the inherent periodicity of the fast Fourier transform (FFT) used to implement this method numerically. Here, spatial filters attenuate waves propagating at large angles, which are sensitive to mirror sources.

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Ultrasound is increasingly being used to modulate the properties of biological membranes for applications in drug delivery and neuromodulation. While various studies have investigated the mechanical aspects of the interaction such as acoustic absorption and membrane deformation, it is not clear how these effects transduce into biological functions, for example, changes in the permeability or the enzymatic activity of the membrane. A critical aspect of the activity of an enzyme is the thermal fluctuations of its solvation or hydration shell.

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High Intensity Focussed Ultrasound (HIFU) is emerging as a non-invasive treatment for localised renal tumours. However, challenges remain in the delivery of the treatment to tumours at depth, with clinical results showing a variation in the ablation efficacy. One clinical trial conducted at the Churchill hospital, Oxford, to investigate the applicability of HIFU for renal tumour ablation found that in 4/10 patients less than 5% of the tumour volume was ablated successfully.

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Objective: High-intensity focused ultrasound (HIFU) therapy can be used for noninvasive treatment of kidney (renal) cancer, but the clinical outcomes have been variable. In this study, the efficacy of renal HIFU therapy was studied using a nonlinear acoustic and thermal simulations in three patients.

Methods: The acoustic simulations were conducted with and without refraction in order to investigate its effect on the shape, size, and pressure distribution at the focus.

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Unlabelled: Understanding the interaction between shock waves and tissue is critical for advancing the use of shock waves for medical applications, such as cancer therapy. This work aims to study shock wave-cell interaction in a more realistic environment, relevant to in vitro and in vivo studies, by using 3D computational models of healthy and cancerous cells. The results indicate that for a single cell embedded in an extracellular environment, the cellular geometry does not influence significantly the membrane strain but does influence the von Mises stress.

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Shock waves are used clinically for breaking kidney stones and treating musculoskeletal indications. The mechanisms by which shock waves interact with tissue are still not well understood. Here, ultra-high-speed imaging was used to visualize the deformation of individual cells embedded in a tissue-mimicking phantom when subject to shock-wave exposure from a clinical source.

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The mechanisms underpinning concussion, traumatic brain injury, and chronic traumatic encephalopathy, and the relationships between these disorders, are poorly understood. We examined post-mortem brains from teenage athletes in the acute-subacute period after mild closed-head impact injury and found astrocytosis, myelinated axonopathy, microvascular injury, perivascular neuroinflammation, and phosphorylated tau protein pathology. To investigate causal mechanisms, we developed a mouse model of lateral closed-head impact injury that uses momentum transfer to induce traumatic head acceleration.

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Shock wave lithotripsy is a non-invasive procedure by which kidney stones are fragmented by thousands of shock waves. Currently, many shock waves are delivered to the body that do not impact the stone, but do result in tissue trauma. This motivates developing a monitoring system to locate kidney stones, with the goal of gating shock waves not aligned with the stone, and hence, reducing renal trauma during lithotripsy.

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The chemobiomechanical signatures of diseased cells are often distinctively different from that of healthy cells. This mainly arises from cellular structural/compositional alterations induced by disease development or therapeutic molecules. Therapeutic shock waves have the potential to mechanically destroy diseased cells and/or increase cell membrane permeability for drug delivery.

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Objective: High-intensity focused ultrasound (HIFU) therapy can be used for noninvasive treatment of kidney (renal) cancer, but the clinical outcomes have been variable. In this study, the efficacy of renal HIFU therapy was studied using nonlinear acoustic and thermal simulations in three patients.

Methods: The acoustic simulations were conducted with and without refraction in order to investigate its effect on the shape, size, and pressure distribution at the focus.

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