A reduced aperture allows for transcranial focus localization at lower pressure

JASA Express Lett. 2022 Jun;2(6):062001. doi: 10.1121/10.0011695. Epub 2022 Jun 28.

Abstract

Localizing the focus during transcranial focused ultrasound procedures is important to ensure accurate targeting of specific brain regions and interpretation of results. Magnetic resonance acoustic radiation force imaging uses the displacement induced by the ultrasound focus in the brain to localize the beam, but the high pressure required to displace brain tissue may cause damage or confounds during subsequent neuromodulatory experiments. Here, reduced apertures were applied to a phased array transducer to generate comparable displacement to the full aperture but with 20% lower free field pressure.