Publication

Blood-brain barrier disruption by low-frequency ultrasound

Journal Paper/Review - Apr 27, 2006

Units
PubMed
Doi

Citation
Reinhard M, Hetzel A, Krüger S, Kretzer S, Talazko J, Ziyeh S, Weber J, Els T. Blood-brain barrier disruption by low-frequency ultrasound. Stroke 2006; 37:1546-8.
Type
Journal Paper/Review (English)
Journal
Stroke 2006; 37
Publication Date
Apr 27, 2006
Issn Electronic
1524-4628
Pages
1546-8
Brief description/objective

BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE
A recent study showed a dramatic increase in cerebral hemorrhage comprising atypical locations with low-frequency ultrasound-mediated recombinant tissue plasminogen activator-thrombolysis in humans. Here, we provide a possible explanation for this phenomenon by a side effect observed in a study using the similar ultrasound device.

METHODS
The study was originally undertaken to investigate by transcranial Doppler sonography, positron emission tomography and perfusion MRI whether transcranial application of wide-field low-frequency ultrasound (300 kHz) improves cerebral hemodynamics in patients with cerebral small vessel disease.

RESULTS
Showing no clear positive effect on cerebral hemodynamics in 4 patients and on cerebral perfusion (positron emission tomography) in 2 patients, the study has been terminated early because of a remarkable side effect in the first patient (a 62 year-old man) undergoing perfusion-MRI: detection of frontoparietal extravasation of Gadolinium contrast agent (applied during MRI perfusion imaging preinsonation) on MRI immediately postinsonation.

CONCLUSIONS
Abnormal permeability of the human blood-brain barrier can be induced by wide-field low-frequency insonation. The observed excessive bleeding rate with low-frequency sonothrombolysis might thus be attributable to primary blood-brain barrier disruption by ultrasound.