نبذة مختصرة : Histotripsy is a non-thermal, non-invasive focused ultrasound therapy using controlled acoustic cavitation to mechanically disintegrate tissue into an acellular homogenate. Histotripsy applies microsecond-length, high pressure (> 10 MPa) pulses to initiate the rapid expansion and collapse of nuclei in a millimeter-scale focal region, applying large stresses and strains to targeted tissues. The cavitation "bubble cloud" generated during histotripsy treatment can be visualized in real time on ultrasound imaging, assisting with treatment guidance and monitoring. Past studies have demonstrated histotripsy's potential for a variety of applications, but histotripsy has not yet been investigated for superficial musculoskeletal tumor ablation. Additionally, preliminary investigations using histotripsy to ablate brain tumors are underway, but require advanced histotripsy devices capable of overcoming attenuation of the therapeutic ultrasound signal by the skull and rely on MRI for real-time guidance. As a result, open questions remain regarding ultrasound-guided histotripsy for brain tumors. Early evidence also suggests that histotripsy ablation may induce immunogenic changes in the tumor microenvironment. Continued research is needed to explain and corroborate these findings under conditions more immunologically representative of human cancers, such as in large animal models with spontaneous tumors. This dissertation investigates the safety and feasibility of using ultrasound-guided histotripsy to ablate superficial soft tissue sarcomas (STS), osteosarcomas (OS), and brain tumors and considers the immunological impacts of histotripsy treatment for STS and OS. The research described herein (1) investigates the ability of histotripsy to treat superficial STS tumors in companion animals with spontaneous tumors, (2) investigates the feasibility of treating bone tumors with histotripsy through a series of ex vivo and in vivo studies, and (3) applies histotripsy for the minimally invasive treatment of superficial brain ...
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