Shell viscosity estimation of lipid-coated microbubbles
Marco Cattaneo, Outi Supponen

TL;DR
This study refines the measurement of shell viscosity in lipid-coated microbubbles, revealing high variability and no size dependency, and highlights methodological biases in previous estimation techniques.
Contribution
It introduces an advanced experimental approach and analysis that corrects prior inaccuracies in shell viscosity estimation of microbubbles.
Findings
Shell viscosity varies by an order of magnitude among microbubbles.
No dependency of shell viscosity on bubble size was observed.
Methodological biases significantly affect previous viscosity estimates.
Abstract
Understanding the shell rheology of ultrasound contrast agent microbubbles is vital for anticipating their bioeffects in clinical practice. Past studies using sophisticated acoustic and optical techniques have made enormous progress in this direction, enabling the development of shell models that adequately reproduce the nonlinear behaviour of the coated microbubble under acoustic excitation. However, there have also been puzzling discrepancies and missing physical explanations for the dependency of shell viscosity on the equilibrium bubble radius, which demands further experimental investigations. In this study, we aim to unravel the cause of such behaviour by performing a refined characterisation of the shell viscosity. We use ultra-high-speed microscopy imaging, optical trapping and wide-field fluorescence to accurately record the individual microbubble response upon ultrasound…
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Taxonomy
TopicsUltrasound and Hyperthermia Applications · Photoacoustic and Ultrasonic Imaging · Ultrasound and Cavitation Phenomena
