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. Low-intensity transcranial ultrasound stimulation (TUS) is a promising non-invasive brain stimulation (NIBS) technique. TUS can reach deeper areas and target smaller regions in the brain than other NIBS techniques, but its application in humans is hampered by the lack of a straightforward and reliable procedure to predict the induced ultrasound exposure. Here, we examined how skull modeling affects computer simulations of TUS.. We characterized the ultrasonic beam after transmission through a sheep skull with a hydrophone and performed computed tomography (CT) image-based simulations of the experimental setup. To study the skull model's impact, we varied: CT acquisition parameters (tube voltage, dose, filter sharpness), image interpolation, segmentation parameters, acoustic property maps (speed-of-sound, density, attenuation), and transducer-position mismatches. We compared the impact of modeling parameter changes on model predictions and on measurement agreement. Spatial-peak intensity and location, total power, and the Gamma metric (a measure for distribution differences) were used as quantitative criteria. Modeling-based sensitivity analysis was also performed for two human head models.. Sheep skull attenuation assignment and transducer positioning had the most important impact on spatial peak intensity (overestimation up to 300%, respectively 30%), followed by filter sharpness and tube voltage (up to 20%), requiring calibration of the mapping functions. Positioning and skull-heterogeneity-structure strongly affected the intensity distribution (gamma tolerances exceeded in>80%, respectively>150%, of the focus-volume in water), necessitating image-based personalized modeling. Simulation results in human models consistently demonstrate a high sensitivity to the skull-heterogeneity model, attenuation tuning, and transducer shifts, the magnitude of which depends on the underlying skull structure complexity.. Our study reveals the importance of properly modeling the skull-heterogeneity and its structure and of accurately reproducing the transducer position. The results raise red flags when translating modeling approaches among clinical sites without proper standardization and/or recalibration of the imaging and modeling parameters.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1088/1741-2552/abf68d | DOI Listing |
Ann Anat
July 2025
Ankara University, Faculty of Veterinary Medicine, Department of Anatomy, Ankara, Türkiye; Graduate School of Health Sciences, Ankara University, Ankara, Türkiye.
Background: 3D geometric morphometric techniques are increasingly employed to assess shape variation with high precision. A critical step is anatomical landmark placement, traditionally done manually, an accurate but time-consuming and inconsistent process for large datasets. To overcome these limitations, automated landmarking tools using artificial intelligence have emerged.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSci Adv
August 2025
PSL University, ESPCI Paris, CNRS, Institut Langevin, Paris, France.
Transcranial ultrasound imaging is usually limited by skull-induced attenuation and high-order aberrations. By using contrast agents such as microbubbles in combination with ultrafast imaging, not only can the signal-to-noise ratio be improved, but super-resolution images down to the micrometer scale of the brain vessels can also be obtained. However, ultrasound localization microscopy (ULM) remains affected by wavefront distortions that limit the microbubble detection rate and hamper their localization.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFActa Biomater
August 2025
Department of Mechanical Engineering, University of Utah, Salt Lake City, UT, USA; Department of Biomedical Engineering, University of Utah, Salt Lake City, UT, USA. Electronic address:
Traumatic brain injury is a leading cause of death and disability worldwide, with mild traumatic brain injury comprising the majority of cases. The pia-arachnoid complex (PAC), located at the brain-skull interface, plays a critical role in brain mechanics during head impacts, yet its response to mechanical loading is understudied. This study investigates the progression of microstructural damage in the PAC under sub-failure cyclic mechanical loading.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInt Dent J
August 2025
College of Dental Medicine, University of Sharjah, United Arab Emirates. Electronic address:
Introduction: The study addresses the need for a biocompatible, resorbable membrane with osteogenic properties, proposing a periosteum-based scaffold because of its inherent growth proteins and pliability.
Methods: The skin from the skull of a young sheep was removed to expose the connective tissue. A 2 cm x 2 cm periosteum sample was harvested and divided into 4 groups for different decellularisation treatments: sample A (control) was left untreated, sample B was treated with 100% alcohol, sample C was treated with 100% alcohol and 1% sodium hypochlorite, and sample D was treated with 100% alcohol, 1% sodium hypochlorite and 0.
Sci Rep
May 2025
Department of Neurosurgery, Helsinki University Hospital, University of Helsinki, Helsinki, Finland.
The exposure of neural structures by removing the overlying bone using a high-speed drill can cause iatrogenic injury to the dura, neural tissue, and vessels. We investigated the safety and efficacy of a novel Surgify Safety Burr (SSB), attachable to existing high-speed drills. Three anesthetized living sheep underwent cranial burr hole drilling (n = 19) and hemilaminectomies (n = 14) with the SSB and standard burrs.
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