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Wayne Kreider

Senior Engineer

Email

wkreider@uw.edu

Phone

206-897-1814

Education

Bachelor of Science Engineering Science & Mechanics, Virginia Tech, 1993

Master of Science Engineering Mechanics, Virginia Tech, 1995

Doctor of Philosophy Bioengineering, University of Washington, 2008

Publications

2000-present and while at APL-UW

Functional and morphological changes associated with burst wave lithotripsy treated pig kidneys

Connors, B.A., T. Gardner, Z. Liu, J.E. Lingeman, W. Kreider, and J.C. Williams Jr., "Functional and morphological changes associated with burst wave lithotripsy treated pig kidneys," J. Endourol., 36, 1580-1585, doi:10.1089/end.2022.0295, 2022.

More Info

1 Dec 2022

Purpose: Burst wave lithotripsy (BWL) is a new technique for comminution of urinary stones. This technology is noninvasive, has a low positive pressure magnitude, and is thought to produce minor amounts of renal injury. However, little is known about the functional changes related to BWL treatment. In this study, we sought to determine if clinical BWL exposure produces a functional or morphological change in the kidney.

Materials and Methods: Twelve female pigs were prepared for renal clearance assessment and served as either sham time controls (6) or were treated with BWL (6). In the treated group, 1 kidney in each pig was exposed to 18,000 pulses at 10 pulses/s with 20 cycles/pulse. Pressure levels related to each pulse were 12 and −7 MPa. Inulin (glomerular filtration rate, GFR) and para-aminohippuric acid (effective renal plasma flow, eRPF) clearance was measured before and 1 hour after treatment. Lesion size analysis was performed to assess the volume of hemorrhagic tissue injury created by each treatment (% FRV).

Results: No visible gross hematuria was observed in any of the collected urine samples of the treated kidneys. BWL exposure also did not lead to a change in GFR or eRPF after treatment, nor did it cause a measurable amount of hemorrhage in the tissue.

Conclusion: Using the clinical treatment parameters employed in this study, BWL did not cause an acute change in renal function or a hemorrhagic lesion.

Development of tough hydrogel phantoms to mimic fibrous tissue for focused ultrasound therapies

Kumar, Y.N., Z. Singh, Y.-N. Wang, G.R. Schade, W. Kreider, M. Bruce, E. Vlaisavljevich, T.D. Khokhlova, and A.D. Maxwell, "Development of tough hydrogel phantoms to mimic fibrous tissue for focused ultrasound therapies," Ultrasound Biol. Med., 48, 1762-1777, doi:10.1016/j.ultrasmedbio.2022.05.002, 2022.

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1 Sep 2022

Tissue-mimicking gels provide a cost-effective medium to optimize histotripsy treatment parameters with immediate feedback. Agarose and polyacrylamide gels are often used to evaluate treatment outcomes as they mimic the acoustic properties and stiffness of a variety of soft tissues, but they do not exhibit high toughness, a characteristic of fibrous connective tissue. To mimic pathologic fibrous tissue found in benign prostate hyperplasia (BPH) and other diseases that are potentially treatable with histotripsy, an optically transparent hydrogel with high toughness was developed that is a hybrid of polyacrylamide and alginate. The stiffness was established using shear wave elastography (SWE) and indentometry techniques and was found to be representative of human BPH ex vivo prostate tissue. Different phantom compositions and excised ex vivo BPH tissue samples were treated with a 700-kHz histotripsy transducer at different pulse repetition frequencies. Post-treatment, the hybrid gels and the tissue samples exhibited differential reduction in stiffness as measured by SWE. On B-mode ultrasound, partially treated areas were present as hyperechoic zones and fully liquified areas as hypoechoic zones. Phase contrast microscopy of the gel samples revealed liquefaction in regions consistent with the target lesion dimensions and correlated to findings identified in tissue samples via histology. The dose required to achieve liquefaction in the hybrid gel was similar to what has been observed in ex vivo tissue and greater than that of agarose of comparable or higher Young's modulus by a factor >10. These results indicate that the developed hydrogels closely mimic elasticities found in BPH prostate ex vivo tissue and have a similar response to histotripsy treatment, thus making them a useful cost-effective alternative for developing and evaluating different treatment protocols.

Improving burst wave lithotripsy effectiveness for small stones and fragments by increasing frequency: Theoretical modeling and ex vivo study

Bailey, M.R., A.D. Maxwell, S. Cao, S. Ramesh, Z. Liu, J.C. Williams, J. Thiel, B. Dunmire, T. Colonius, E. Kuznetsova, W. Kreider, M.D. Sorensen, J.E. Lindeman, and O.A. Sapozhnikov, "Improving burst wave lithotripsy effectiveness for small stones and fragments by increasing frequency: Theoretical modeling and ex vivo study," J. Endourol., 36, doi:10.1089/end.2021.0714, 2022.

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5 Jul 2022

Introduction and Objective: In clinical trial NCT03873259, a 2.6-mm lower pole stone was treated transcutaneously and ex vivo with 390-kHz burst wave lithotripsy (BWL) for 40 minutes and failed to break. The stone was subsequently fragmented with 650-kHz BWL after a 4-minute exposure. This study investigated how to fragment small stones and why varying the BWL frequency may more effectively fragment stones to dust.

Methods: A linear elastic theoretical model was used to calculate the stress created inside stones from shock wave lithotripsy (SWL) and different BWL frequencies mimicking the stone's size, shape, lamellar structure, and composition. To test model predictions about the impact of BWL frequency, matched pairs of stones (1–5 mm) were treated at (1) 390 kHz, (2) 830 kHz, and (3) 390 kHz followed by 830 kHz. The mass of fragments > 1 and 2 mm was measured over 10 minutes of exposure.

Results: The linear elastic model predicts that the maximum principal stress inside a stone increases to more than 5.5 times the pressure applied by the ultrasound wave as frequency is increased, regardless of the composition tested. The threshold frequency for stress amplification is proportionate to the wave speed divided by the stone diameter. Thus, smaller stones may be likely to fragment at a higher frequency, but not at a lower frequency below a limit. Unlike with SWL, this amplification in BWL occurs consistently with spherical and irregularly shaped stones. In water tank experiments, stones smaller than the threshold size broke fastest at high frequency (p = 0.0003), whereas larger stones broke equally well to submillimeter dust at high, low, or mixed frequencies.

Conclusions: For small stones and fragments, increasing frequency of BWL may produce amplified stress in the stone causing the stone to break. Using the strategies outlined here, stones of all sizes may be turned to dust efficiently with BWL.

More Publications

Inventions

High Intensity Focused Ultrasound Systems for Treating Tissue

Inventors: Y.-N. Wang, M.R. Bailey, T.D. Khokhlova (Seattle), W. Kreider, A.D. Maxwell, G.R. Schade (Seattle), and V.A. Khokhlova

Patent Number: 11,857,813

Yak-Nam Wang, Mike Bailey, Wayne Kreider, Adam Maxwell, Vera Khokhlova

Patent

2 Jan 2024

Noninvasive Fragmentation of Urinary Tract Stones with Focused Ultrasound

Patent Number: 11,583,299

Adam Maxwell, Bryan Cunitz, Wayne Kreider, Oleg Sapozhnikov, Mike Bailey

Patent

21 Feb 2023

Confinement or Movement of an Object Using Focused Ultrasound Waves to Generate an Ultrasound Intensity Well

Patent Number: 11,580,945

Adam Maxwell, Oleg Sapozhnikov, Wayne Kreider, Mike Bailey

Patent

14 Feb 2023

More Inventions

Acoustics Air-Sea Interaction & Remote Sensing Center for Environmental & Information Systems Center for Industrial & Medical Ultrasound Electronic & Photonic Systems Ocean Engineering Ocean Physics Polar Science Center
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