Premature cardiac contractions produced by ultrasound and microbubble contrast agents in mice

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Abstract

This study investigated the effects of microbubble contrast agents on the production of premature cardiac contractions in mice exposed to ultrasound. Acoustic exposures consisted of a single pulse of 1.2-MHz ultrasound delivered to the murine heart during diastole. Two contrast agents (Al-bunex®, Optison®) and two pulse durations (5 ms, 10 μs) were investigated. The threshold for producing a premature contraction with a single 10-μs duration pulse was ∼ 1 MPa. Using a 5-ms pulse, the threshold with contrast was an order of magnitude less than the threshold without contrast. These results are consistent with cavitation as a mechanism for this bioeffect. © 2005 Acoustical Society of America.

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Dalecki, D., Rota, C., Raeman, C. H., & Child, S. Z. (2005). Premature cardiac contractions produced by ultrasound and microbubble contrast agents in mice. Acoustic Research Letters Online, 6(3), 221–226. https://doi.org/10.1121/1.1935467

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