Ultrasound in Medicine and Biology
Volume 36, Issue 9 , Pages 1379-1394, September 2010

Biomedical Applications of Radiation Force of Ultrasound: Historical Roots and Physical Basis

  • Armen P. Sarvazyan

      Affiliations

    • Artann Laboratories, Trenton, NJ
    • Corresponding Author InformationAddress correspondence to: Armen P. Sarvazyan, 1753 Linvale-Harbourton Rd., Lambertville, NJ 08530.
  • ,
  • Oleg V. Rudenko

      Affiliations

    • Moscow State University, Moscow, Russian Federation
    • Blekinge Institute of Technology, Karlskrona, Sweden
  • ,
  • Wesley L. Nyborg

      Affiliations

    • University of Vermont, Burlington

Received 13 October 2009; received in revised form 13 May 2010; accepted 14 May 2010.

Abstract 

Radiation force is a universal phenomenon in any wave motion, electromagnetic or acoustic. Although acoustic and electromagnetic waves are both characterized by time variation of basic quantities, they are also both capable of exerting a steady force called radiation force. In 1902, Lord Rayleigh published his classic work on the radiation force of sound, introducing the concept of acoustic radiation pressure, and some years later, further fundamental contributions to the radiation force phenomenon were made by L. Brillouin and P. Langevin. Many of the studies discussing radiation force published before 1990 were related to techniques for measuring acoustic power of therapeutic devices; also, radiation force was one of the factors considered in the search for noncavitational, nonthermal mechanisms of ultrasonic bioeffects. A major surge in various biomedical applications of acoustic radiation force started in the 1990s and continues today. Numerous new applications emerged including manipulation of cells in suspension, increasing the sensitivity of biosensors and immunochemical tests, assessing viscoelastic properties of fluids and biological tissues, elasticity imaging, monitoring ablation of lesions during ablation therapy, targeted drug and gene delivery, molecular imaging and acoustical tweezers. We briefly present in this review the major milestones in the history of radiation force and its biomedical applications. In discussing the physical basis of radiation force and its applications, we present basic equations describing the relationship of radiation stress with parameters of acoustical fields and with the induced motion in the biological media. Momentum and force associated with a plane-traveling wave, equations for nonlinear and nonsteady-state acoustic streams, radiation stress tensor for solids and biological tissues and radiation force acting on particles and microbubbles are considered. (E-mail: armen@artannlabs.com)

Key Words: Acoustic radiation force, Biomedical applications of ultrasound, History of radiation force, Theory of radiation force, Radiation force tensor

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PII: S0301-5629(10)00245-0

doi:10.1016/j.ultrasmedbio.2010.05.015

Ultrasound in Medicine and Biology
Volume 36, Issue 9 , Pages 1379-1394, September 2010