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Acoustic characterization of monodisperse lipid-coated microbubbles: Relationship between size and shell viscoelastic properties

Authors

PARRALES BORRERO, MIGUEL ÁNGEL, Fernandez, Juan M. , Perez-Saborid, Miguel , Kopechek, Jonathan A. , Porter, Tyrone M.

External publication

No

Means

J. Acoust. Soc. Am.

Scope

Article

Nature

Científica

JCR Quartile

SJR Quartile

JCR Impact

1.503

SJR Impact

0.887

Publication date

01/09/2014

ISI

000342205700021

Abstract

The acoustic attenuation spectrum of lipid-coated microbubble suspensions was measured in order to characterize the linear acoustic behavior of ultrasound contrast agents. For that purpose, microbubbles samples were generated with a very narrow size distribution by using microfluidics techniques. A performance as good as optical characterization techniques of single microbubbles was achieved using this method. Compared to polydispersions (i.e., contrast agents used clinically), monodisperse contrast agents have a narrower attenuation spectrum, which presents a maximum peak at a frequency value corresponding to the average single bubble resonance frequency. The low polydispersity index of the samples made the estimation of the lipid viscoelastic properties more accurate since, as previously reported, the shell linear parameters may change with the equilibrium bubble radius. The results showed the great advantage of dealing with monodisperse populations rather than polydisperse populations for the acoustic characterization of ultrasound contrast agents. (C) 2014 Acoustical Society of America.

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