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Dive into the research topics where Adam D. Maxwell is active.

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Featured researches published by Adam D. Maxwell.


Ultrasound in Medicine and Biology | 2009

NONINVASIVE THROMBOLYSIS USING PULSED ULTRASOUND CAVITATION THERAPY - HISTOTRIPSY

Adam D. Maxwell; Charles A. Cain; Alexander P. Duryea; Lingqian Yuan; Hitinder S. Gurm; Zhen Xu

Clinically available thrombolysis techniques are limited by either slow reperfusion (drugs) or invasiveness (catheters) and carry significant risks of bleeding. In this study, the feasibility of using histotripsy as an efficient and noninvasive thrombolysis technique was investigated. Histotripsy fractionates soft tissue through controlled cavitation using focused, short, high-intensity ultrasound pulses. In vitro blood clots formed from fresh canine blood were treated by histotripsy. The treatment was applied using a focused 1-MHz transducer, with five-cycle pulses at a pulse repetition rate of 1kHz. Acoustic pressures varying from 2 to 12MPa peak negative pressure were tested. Our results show that histotripsy can perform effective thrombolysis with ultrasound energy alone. Histotripsy thrombolysis only occurred at peak negative pressure >or=6MPa when initiation of a cavitating bubble cloud was detected using acoustic backscatter monitoring. Blood clots weighing 330mg were completely broken down by histotripsy in 1.5 to 5min. The clot was fractionated to debris with >96% weight smaller than 5mum diameter. Histotripsy thrombolysis treatment remained effective under a fast, pulsating flow (a circulatory model) as well as in static saline. Additionally, we observed that fluid flow generated by a cavitation cloud can attract, trap and further break down clot fragments. This phenomenon may provide a noninvasive method to filter and eliminate hazardous emboli during thrombolysis.


Journal of the Acoustical Society of America | 2011

Cavitation clouds created by shock scattering from bubbles during histotripsy

Adam D. Maxwell; Tzu Yin Wang; Charles A. Cain; J. Brian Fowlkes; Oleg A. Sapozhnikov; Michael R. Bailey; Zhen Xu

Histotripsy is a therapy that focuses short-duration, high-amplitude pulses of ultrasound to incite a localized cavitation cloud that mechanically breaks down tissue. To investigate the mechanism of cloud formation, high-speed photography was used to observe clouds generated during single histotripsy pulses. Pulses of 5-20 cycles duration were applied to a transparent tissue phantom by a 1-MHz spherically focused transducer. Clouds initiated from single cavitation bubbles that formed during the initial cycles of the pulse, and grew along the acoustic axis opposite the propagation direction. Based on these observations, we hypothesized that clouds form as a result of large negative pressure generated by the backscattering of shockwaves from a single bubble. The positive-pressure phase of the wave inverts upon scattering and superimposes on the incident negative-pressure phase to create this negative pressure and cavitation. The process repeats with each cycle of the incident wave, and the bubble cloud elongates toward the transducer. Finite-amplitude propagation distorts the incident wave such that the peak-positive pressure is much greater than the peak-negative pressure, which exaggerates the effect. The hypothesis was tested with two modified incident waves that maintained negative pressure but reduced the positive pressure amplitude. These waves suppressed cloud formation which supported the hypothesis.


Journal of the Acoustical Society of America | 2007

A mechanistic analysis of stone fracture in lithotripsy

Oleg A. Sapozhnikov; Adam D. Maxwell; Brian MacConaghy; Michael R. Bailey

In vitro experiments and an elastic wave model were used to analyze how stress is induced in kidney stones by lithotripsy and to test the roles of individual mechanisms-spallation, squeezing, and cavitation. Cylindrical U30 cement stones were treated in an HM-3-style lithotripter. Baffles were used to block specific waves responsible for spallation or squeezing. Stones with and without surface cracks added to simulate cavitation damage were tested in glycerol (a cavitation suppressive medium). Each case was simulated using the elasticity equations for an isotropic medium. The calculated location of maximum stress compared well with the experimental observations of where stones fractured in two pieces. Higher calculated maximum tensile stress correlated with fewer shock waves required for fracture. The highest calculated tensile stresses resulted from shear waves initiated at the proximal corners and strengthened along the side surfaces of the stone by the liquid-borne lithotripter shock wave. Peak tensile stress was in the distal end of the stone where fracture occurred. Reflection of the longitudinal wave from the distal face of the stone--spallation-produced lower stresses. Surface cracks accelerated fragmentation when created near the location where the maximum stress was predicted.


Scientific Reports | 2012

Carbon-Nanotube Optoacoustic Lens for Focused Ultrasound Generation and High-Precision Targeted Therapy

Hyoung Won Baac; Jong G. Ok; Adam D. Maxwell; Kyu Tae Lee; Yu Chih Chen; A. John Hart; Zhen Xu; Euisik Yoon; L. Jay Guo

We demonstrate a new optical approach to generate high-frequency (>15 MHz) and high-amplitude focused ultrasound, which can be used for non-invasive ultrasound therapy. A nano-composite film of carbon nanotubes (CNTs) and elastomeric polymer is formed on concave lenses, and used as an efficient optoacoustic source due to the high optical absorption of the CNTs and rapid heat transfer to the polymer upon excitation by pulsed laser irradiation. The CNT-coated lenses can generate unprecedented optoacoustic pressures of >50 MPa in peak positive on a tight focal spot of 75 μm in lateral and 400 μm in axial widths. This pressure amplitude is remarkably high in this frequency regime, producing pronounced shock effects and non-thermal pulsed cavitation at the focal zone. We demonstrate that the optoacoustic lens can be used for micro-scale ultrasonic fragmentation of solid materials and a single-cell surgery in terms of removing the cells from substrates and neighboring cells.


Journal of Vascular and Interventional Radiology | 2011

Noninvasive Treatment of Deep Venous Thrombosis Using Pulsed Ultrasound Cavitation Therapy (Histotripsy) in a Porcine Model

Adam D. Maxwell; Gabe E. Owens; Hitinder S. Gurm; Kimberly Ives; Daniel D. Myers; Zhen Xu

PURPOSE This study evaluated histotripsy as a noninvasive, image-guided method of thrombolysis in a porcine model of deep vein thrombosis. Histotripsy therapy uses short, high-intensity, focused ultrasound pulses to cause mechanical breakdown of targeted soft tissue by acoustic cavitation, which is guided by real-time ultrasound imaging. This is an in vivo feasibility study of histotripsy thrombolysis. METHODS AND MATERIALS Acute thrombi were formed in the femoral vein of juvenile pigs weighing 30-40 kg by balloon occlusion with two catheters and thrombin infusion. A 10-cm-diameter 1-MHz focused transducer was used for therapy. An 8-MHz ultrasound imager was used to align the clot with the therapy focus. Therapy consisted of five cycle pulses delivered at a rate of 1 kHz and peak negative pressure between 14 and 19 MPa. The focus was scanned along the long axis of the vessel to treat the entire visible clot during ultrasound exposure. The targeted region identified by a hyperechoic cavitation bubble cloud was visualized via ultrasound during treatment. RESULTS Thrombus breakdown was apparent as a decrease in echogenicity within the vessel in 10 of 12 cases and in 7 cases improved flow through the vein as measured by color Doppler. Vessel histology found denudation of vascular endothelium and small pockets of hemorrhage in the vessel adventitia and underlying muscle and fatty tissue, but perforation of the vessel wall was never observed. CONCLUSIONS The results indicate histotripsy has potential for development as a noninvasive treatment for deep vein thrombosis.


Ultrasound in Medicine and Biology | 2010

A tissue phantom for visualization and measurement of ultrasound-induced cavitation damage

Adam D. Maxwell; Tzu Yin Wang; Lingqian Yuan; Alexander P. Duryea; Zhen Xu; Charles A. Cain

Many ultrasound studies involve the use of tissue-mimicking materials to research phenomena in vitro and predict in vivo bioeffects. We have developed a tissue phantom to study cavitation-induced damage to tissue. The phantom consists of red blood cells suspended in an agarose hydrogel. The acoustic and mechanical properties of the gel phantom were found to be similar to soft tissue properties. The phantoms response to cavitation was evaluated using histotripsy. Histotripsy causes breakdown of tissue structures by the generation of controlled cavitation using short, focused, high-intensity ultrasound pulses. Histotripsy lesions were generated in the phantom and kidney tissue using a spherically focused 1-MHz transducer generating 15 cycle pulses, at a pulse repetition frequency of 100 Hz with a peak negative pressure of 14 MPa. Damage appeared clearly as increased optical transparency of the phantom due to rupture of individual red blood cells. The morphology of lesions generated in the phantom was very similar to that generated in kidney tissue at both macroscopic and cellular levels. Additionally, lesions in the phantom could be visualized as hypoechoic regions on a B-mode ultrasound image, similar to histotripsy lesions in tissue. High-speed imaging of the optically transparent phantom was used to show that damage coincides with the presence of cavitation. These results indicate that the phantom can accurately mimic the response of soft tissue to cavitation and provide a useful tool for studying damage induced by acoustic cavitation.


Applied Physics Letters | 2008

Low-noise wideband ultrasound detection using polymer microring resonators

Sheng-Wen Huang; Sung Liang Chen; Tao Ling; Adam D. Maxwell; Matthew O’Donnell; L. Jay Guo; Shai Ashkenazi

Polymer microring resonators for low-noise, wideband ultrasound detection are presented. Using a nanoimprinting technique, we fabricated polymer microring resonators with a quality factor of 6000 resulting in high sensitivity to ultrasound. A noise-equivalent pressure of 0.23 kPa over 1-75 MHz and a detection bandwidth of over 90 MHz at -3 dB were measured. These results demonstrate the potential of polymer microring resonators for high-frequency ultrasound and photoacoustic imaging. For a typical photoacoustic imaging test case, the high sensitivity demonstrated in these devices would increase imaging depth by a factor of 3 compared to state-of-the-art polyvinylidene fluoride detectors.


IEEE Transactions on Ultrasonics Ferroelectrics and Frequency Control | 2014

Histotripsy beyond the intrinsic cavitation threshold using very short ultrasound pulses: microtripsy

Kuang-Wei Lin; Yohan Kim; Adam D. Maxwell; Tzu-Yin Wang; Timothy L. Hall; Zhen Xu; J. Brian Fowlkes; Charles A. Cain

Histotripsy produces tissue fractionation through dense energetic bubble clouds generated by short, high-pressure, ultrasound pulses. Conventional histotripsy treatments have used longer pulses from 3 to 10 cycles, wherein the lesionproducing bubble cloud generation depends on the pressurerelease scattering of very high peak positive shock fronts from previously initiated, sparsely distributed bubbles (the shockscattering mechanism). In our recent work, the peak negative pressure (P-) for generation of dense bubble clouds directly by a single negative half cycle, the intrinsic threshold, was measured. In this paper, the dense bubble clouds and resulting lesions (in red blood cell phantoms and canine tissues) generated by these supra-intrinsic threshold pulses were studied. A 32-element, PZT-8, 500-kHz therapy transducer was used to generate very short (<;2 cycles) histotripsy pulses at a pulse repetition frequency (PRF) of 1 Hz and P- from 24.5 to 80.7 MPa. The results showed that the spatial extent of the histotripsy-induced lesions increased as the applied P- increased, and the sizes of these lesions corresponded well to the estimates of the focal regions above the intrinsic cavitation threshold, at least in the lower pressure regime (P- = 26 to 35 MPa). The average sizes for the smallest reproducible lesions were approximately 0.9 - 1.7 mm (lateral - axial), significantly smaller than the -6-dB beamwidth of the transducer (1.8 - 4.0 mm). These results suggest that, using the intrinsic threshold mechanism, well-confined and microscopic lesions can be precisely generated and their spatial extent can be estimated based on the fraction of the focal region exceeding the intrinsic cavitation threshold. Because the supra-threshold portion of the negative half cycle can be precisely controlled, lesions considerably less than a wavelength are easily produced, hence the term microtripsy.


Acoustics Today | 2012

Disintegration of tissue using high intensity focused ultrasound: Two approaches that utilize shock waves

Adam D. Maxwell; Oleg A. Sapozhnikov; Michael R. Bailey; Lawrence A. Crum; Zhen Xu; Brian Fowlkes; Charles A. Cain; Vera A. Khokhlova

Introduction Surgery is moving more and more toward minimally-invasive procedures – using laparoscopic approaches with instruments inserted through tiny incisions or catheters placed in blood vessels through puncture sites. These techniques minimize the risks to the patient such as bleeding complications or infection during surgery. Taken a step further, high-intensity focused ultrasound (HIFU) can provide a tool to accomplish many of the same procedures without any incision at all. With HIFU, an ultrasound transducer can be positioned outside the body and focused through the skin and overlying tissue to deliver high-amplitude ultrasound to a target structure such as a tumor (Fig. 1). Absorption of acoustic energy within the focal volume is high enough to rapidly heat the tissue, effectively ‘cooking’ it within seconds or even a fraction of a second. This procedure also removes the need for a sterile operating room: without the risk of infection, HIFU noninvasive therapy could be done in the doctor’s office or outpatient clinic. For many years, HIFU surgery was centered on utilizing a thermal effect— tissue heating and denaturation caused by absorption of ultrasound. As the heating rate is dependent on local acoustic intensity, the temperature rises significantly enough to ablate tissue only in the focal region. While thermal ablation is the dominant interaction at lower HIFU focal intensities, higher intensities can introduce other bioeffects (Fig. 2). If the temperature rises to 100C during sonication, boiling bubbles appear in the tissue, inducing additional mechanical as well as thermal damage. At higher focal intensities, mechanical effects of the ultrasound wave itself become significant. The large tension phase of the wave can cause sporadic inertial cavitation or even a cloud of cavitation bubbles in the focal region in tissue—a process where the small gas bubbles grow and violently collapse, creating destructive effects on the tissue. Nonlinear propagation effects result in formation of high-amplitude shock waves around the focus which themselves create mechanical stress in the tissue. In addition, significantly enhanced heat deposiDISINTEGRATION OF TISSUE USING HIGH INTENSITY FOCUSED ULTRASOUND: TWO APPROACHES THAT UTILIZE SHOCK WAVES


International Journal of Hyperthermia | 2015

Histotripsy methods in mechanical disintegration of tissue: towards clinical applications.

Vera A. Khokhlova; J. Brian Fowlkes; William W. Roberts; George R. Schade; Zhen Xu; Tatiana D. Khokhlova; Timothy L. Hall; Adam D. Maxwell; Yak-Nam Wang; Charles A. Cain

Abstract In high intensity focused ultrasound (HIFU) therapy, an ultrasound beam is focused within the body to locally affect the targeted site without damaging intervening tissues. The most common HIFU regime is thermal ablation. Recently there has been increasing interest in generating purely mechanical lesions in tissue (histotripsy). This paper provides an overview of several studies on the development of histotripsy methods toward clinical applications. Two histotripsy approaches and examples of their applications are presented. In one approach, sequences of high-amplitude, short (microsecond-long), focused ultrasound pulses periodically produce dense, energetic bubble clouds that mechanically disintegrate tissue. In an alternative approach, longer (millisecond-long) pulses with shock fronts generate boiling bubbles and the interaction of shock fronts with the resulting vapour cavity causes tissue disintegration. Recent preclinical studies on histotripsy are reviewed for treating benign prostatic hyperplasia (BPH), liver and kidney tumours, kidney stone fragmentation, enhancing anti-tumour immune response, and tissue decellularisation for regenerative medicine applications. Potential clinical advantages of the histotripsy methods are discussed. Histotripsy methods can be used to mechanically ablate a wide variety of tissues, whilst selectivity sparing structures such as large vessels. Both ultrasound and MR imaging can be used for targeting and monitoring the treatment in real time. Although the two approaches utilise different mechanisms for tissue disintegration, both have many of the same advantages and offer a promising alternative method of non-invasive surgery.

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Wayne Kreider

University of Washington

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Zhen Xu

University of Michigan

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Yak-Nam Wang

University of Washington

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