Cyclic jetting enables microbubble-mediated drug delivery
Marco Cattaneo, Giulia Guerriero, Gazendra Shakya, Lisa A. Krattiger, Lorenza G. Paganella, Maria L. Narciso, Outi Supponen

TL;DR
This paper uncovers the physics of cyclic microjet formation in microbubbles under ultrasound, revealing a novel mechanism for enhanced drug delivery across biological barriers like the blood-brain barrier.
Contribution
It introduces the concept of cyclic microjets as a new class of jets, supported by experimental visualization and theoretical modeling, advancing understanding of microbubble-mediated drug delivery.
Findings
Microbubbles puncture cell membranes via cyclic microjets.
Microjets form at ultrasound pressures below 100kPa.
Microjet stress exceeds previous mechanisms by at least an order of magnitude.
Abstract
The pursuit of targeted therapies capable of overcoming biological barriers, including the tenacious blood-brain barrier, has spurred the investigation into stimuli-responsive microagents. This approach could improve therapeutic efficacy, reduce undesirable side effects, and open avenues for treating previously incurable diseases. Intravenously-administered ultrasound-responsive microbubbles are one of the most promising agents, having demonstrated potential in several clinical trials. However, the mechanism by which microbubbles enhance drug absorption remains unclear. Here, we reveal through unprecedented time-resolved side-view visualisations that single microbubbles, upon microsecond-long ultrasound driving, puncture the cell membrane and induce drug uptake via stable cyclic microjets. Our theoretical models successfully reproduce the observed bubble and cell dynamic responses. We…
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Taxonomy
TopicsFluid Dynamics and Mixing
