The role of trapped bubbles in kidney stone detection with the color Doppler ultrasound twinkling artifact.

Phys Med Biol

Center for Industrial and Medical Ultrasound, Applied Physics Laboratory, University of Washington, 1013 NE 40th St., Seattle, WA 98105, United States of America. Department of Mechanical Engineering, University of Washington, Stevens Way, Box 352600, Seattle, WA 98195, United States of America. Current address: Graduate Program in Acoustics, The Pennsylvania State University, 201E Applied Science Building, University Park, PA 16802, United States of America. Author to whom any correspondence should be addressed.

Published: January 2018

The color Doppler ultrasound twinkling artifact, which highlights kidney stones with rapidly changing color, has the potential to improve stone detection; however, its inconsistent appearance has limited its clinical utility. Recently, it was proposed stable crevice bubbles on the kidney stone surface cause twinkling; however, the hypothesis is not fully accepted because the bubbles have not been directly observed. In this paper, the micron or submicron-sized bubbles predicted by the crevice bubble hypothesis are enlarged in kidney stones of five primary compositions by exposure to acoustic rarefaction pulses or hypobaric static pressures in order to simultaneously capture their appearance by high-speed photography and ultrasound imaging. On filming stones that twinkle, consecutive rarefaction pulses from a lithotripter caused some bubbles to reproducibly grow from specific locations on the stone surface, suggesting the presence of pre-existing crevice bubbles. Hyperbaric and hypobaric static pressures were found to modify the twinkling artifact; however, the simple expectation that hyperbaric exposures reduce and hypobaric pressures increase twinkling by shrinking and enlarging bubbles, respectively, largely held for rough-surfaced stones but was inadequate for smoother stones. Twinkling was found to increase or decrease in response to elevated static pressure on smooth stones, perhaps because of the compression of internal voids. These results support the crevice bubble hypothesis of twinkling and suggest the kidney stone crevices that give rise to the twinkling phenomenon may be internal as well as external.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5791757PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1088/1361-6560/aa9a2fDOI Listing

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