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Intense focused ultrasound can reliably induce sensations in human test subjects in a manner correlated with the density of their mechanoreceptors. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • Intense focused ultrasound (iFU) can stimulate sensations both on the skin's surface and deeper in the tissue, unlike other stimulation methods which generally only affect surface-level receptors.
  • Previous research suggests that the effectiveness of iFU stimulation is linked to the density of mechanoreceptors in the area being stimulated.
  • In a study with 17 participants, the intensity of iFU needed to evoke sensations was found to correlate with mechanoreceptor density, supporting the idea that iFU's effectiveness is related to the number of mechanoreceptors present.

Article Abstract

Sensations generated by intense focused ultrasound (iFU) can occur cutaneously and/or at depth, in contrast to other forms of stimulation (e.g., heat, electricity), whose action usually occurs only at the skin surface, or mechanical stimulation (e.g., von Frey hairs, calibrated forceps, tourniquets) that compress and thus stimulate all tissue. Previous work on iFU stimulation has led to the hypothesis that the tactile basis of iFU stimulation should correlate with the density of mechanoreceptors at the site of iFU stimulation. Here we tested that hypothesis, correlating a "two-point" neurological examination-a standard measure of superficial mechanoreceptor density-with the intensity of superficially applied iFU necessary to generate sensations with high sensitivity and specificity. We applied iFU at 1.1 MHz for 0.1 s to the fingertip pads of 17 test subjects in a blinded fashion and escalated intensities until they consistently observed iFU-induced sensations. Most test subjects achieved high values of sensitivity and specificity, doing so at values of spatially and temporally averaged intensity measuring <100 W/cm(2). Moreover, the test subjects' sensitivity to iFU stimulation correlated with the density of mechanoreceptors as determined by a standard two-point discrimination neurological examination, consistent with earlier hypotheses.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3245865PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ultrasmedbio.2011.09.020DOI Listing

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