Shock wave lithotripsy (SWL) is the treatment of choice for renal stone disease and has been a widely accepted and effective treatment. However, as manufacturers seek to deliver new and improved devices, they have generally migrated from units that produce broad focal volumes with moderately-high shock wave amplitudes to tight focal volumes with high shock wave amplitudes. This approach is intended to enhance stone comminution and reduce tissue injury. However, it appears that these manufacturers have discounted the role of cavitation in either stone comminution or tissue injury. Over the past several years, this PPG team has undertaken a broad and comprehensive study of both the physical and the biological mechanisms associated with SWL; this particular project has made considerable progress in examining the role of cavitation and find it to be the dominant mechanism of action. Although we have made much progress, there is still much that is not understood, and this proposal details our continued search to understand the physical mechanisms through which SWL can continue to provide a safe and effective treatment for stone disease. In order for our scientific progress to be optimized, we have concentrated on a general direction meant to transition our discoveries from the laboratory to the manufacturer. Accordingly, in this proposal we seek ways to improve the devices and the approaches to SWL and to disseminate to manufacturers and the general public specific recommendations for such improvements. To this end, our specific aims are summarized as follows: 1) to develop techniques and devices that would provide monitoring feedback on cavitation, blood flow, and stone comminution to clinicians in real-time 2) to use our dual-pulse lithotripter to test our hypothesis that localizing and intensifying the cavitation field will maximize comminution while minimizing tissue injury; 3) to determine whether lithotripter shock waves or the forces produced by cavitation cluster collapse produce the greatest stresses within the stone; 4) to measure the individual effects of the various components of the shock-wave waveform and from this knowledge, design an optimal waveform; and 5) to expand our cavitation model capability by introducing the effect of evaporation within the bubble, and from these studies, obtain estimates of the level of free radical production by SWL.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases (NIDDK)
Type
Research Program Projects (P01)
Project #
5P01DK043881-12
Application #
7279972
Study Section
Special Emphasis Panel (ZDK1)
Project Start
Project End
Budget Start
2006-07-01
Budget End
2007-06-30
Support Year
12
Fiscal Year
2006
Total Cost
$396,349
Indirect Cost
Name
Indiana University-Purdue University at Indianapolis
Department
Type
DUNS #
603007902
City
Indianapolis
State
IN
Country
United States
Zip Code
46202
Zwaschka, Theresa A; Ahn, Justin S; Cunitz, Bryan W et al. (2018) Combined Burst Wave Lithotripsy and Ultrasonic Propulsion for Improved Urinary Stone Fragmentation. J Endourol 32:344-349
Connors, Bret A; Schaefer, Ray B; Gallagher, John J et al. (2018) Preliminary Report on Stone Breakage and Lesion Size Produced by a New Extracorporeal Electrohydraulic (Sparker Array) Discharge Device. Urology 116:213-217
Dai, Jessica C; Dunmire, Barbrina; Sternberg, Kevan M et al. (2018) Retrospective comparison of measured stone size and posterior acoustic shadow width in clinical ultrasound images. World J Urol 36:727-732
Janssen, Karmon M; Brand, Timothy C; Bailey, Michael R et al. (2018) Effect of Stone Size and Composition on Ultrasonic Propulsion Ex Vivo. Urology 111:225-229
Simon, Julianna C; Sapozhnikov, Oleg A; Kreider, Wayne et al. (2018) The role of trapped bubbles in kidney stone detection with the color Doppler ultrasound twinkling artifact. Phys Med Biol 63:025011
Matula, Thomas J; Sapozhnikov, Oleg A; Ostrovsky, Lev A et al. (2018) Ultrasound-based cell sorting with microbubbles: A feasibility study. J Acoust Soc Am 144:41
Williams Jr, James C; Borofsky, Michael S; Bledsoe, Sharon B et al. (2018) Papillary Ductal Plugging is a Mechanism for Early Stone Retention in Brushite Stone Disease. J Urol 199:186-192
Sapozhnikov, Oleg; Nikolaeva, Anastasiia; Bailey, Michael (2018) The effect of shear waves in an elastic sphere on the radiation force from a quasi-Gaussian beam. Proc Meet Acoust 32:
Handa, Rajash K; Territo, Paul R; Blomgren, Philip M et al. (2017) Development of a novel magnetic resonance imaging acquisition and analysis workflow for the quantification of shock wave lithotripsy-induced renal hemorrhagic injury. Urolithiasis 45:507-513
Rosnitskiy, Pavel B; Yuldashev, Petr V; Sapozhnikov, Oleg A et al. (2017) Design of HIFU Transducers for Generating Specified Nonlinear Ultrasound Fields. IEEE Trans Ultrason Ferroelectr Freq Control 64:374-390

Showing the most recent 10 out of 267 publications