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RESEARCH
Science
Medicine
HEALTH
DIAGNOSTICS
Risk of lung damage from ultrasound greater than once
thought
James
E. Kloeppel, Physical Sciences Editor
(217) 244-1073; kloeppel@uiuc.edu
9/1/2001
CHAMPAIGN, Ill. Pumping more energy into a beam of diagnostic
ultrasound could produce a better image and therefore a better
diagnosis but studies at the University of Illinois suggest the
risk of ultrasound-induced lung damage is greater than many scientists
previously believed.
While there has been no evidence that clinical use of ultrasound has
had any adverse effects in humans, safety concerns were raised recently
when scientists discovered that diagnostic treatment levels could produce
acute lung hemorrhages in laboratory animals.
"The big question is whether human lungs can be damaged by diagnostic
ultrasound, and if so, under what exposure conditions," said William
O'Brien Jr., a UI professor of electrical and computer engineering and
the director of the Bioacoustics Research Laboratory at the university's
Beckman Institute for Advanced Science and Technology.
In experiments performed on mice, rats, rabbits and pigs, O'Brien and
colleagues at the UI found similar patches of lung damage, independent
of animal size or species.
"Whats common in all of these animals is the thickness of
the air-blood barrier near the surface of the lung," said James
F. Zachary, a UI professor of veterinary pathology and interim department
head of veterinary pathobiology. "This barrier is of similar thickness
in humans, also so people may be just as susceptible to this
type of lung damage."
The air-blood barrier the membrane through which oxygen diffuses
in the lung is very thin, and may be the principal target for
ultrasound-induced lung damage.
"The cause of the damage appears to be mechanical in nature,"
OBrien said. "A sound wave has momentum and imparts a force.
A beam of sound focused at an air-water interface, for example, can
shoot water into the air like the cold steam produced by ultrasonic
humidifiers. We think the sound waves push against the lung tissue hard
enough to create small rips, which cause bleeding."
Acoustic forces, acting on the air-blood barrier, "could initiate
a lesion that could grow through alveolar hemorrhage and propagate into
deeper lung tissue," Zachary said. "The lesion would stop
growing only when the hemorrhage becomes large enough to effectively
dissipate the acoustic energy."
In their work, the researchers found that lung damage appears to be
dependent upon ultrasound beamwidth, pulse duration and exposure duration.
In an age-dependent study performed on pigs, the researchers also found
that older animals were most sensitive to lung damage.
"One possible explanation is that the lung membrane becomes less
pliable with age, and rips more easily when exposed to sound waves,"
OBrien said.
The researchers will present their latest findings at the 17th International
Congress on Acoustics, to be held in Rome Sept. 2-7. The National Institutes
of Health funded their work.
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