“…Previous studies have demonstrated that microbubbles increase the possibility of acoustic cavitation and cavitation-related vascular damage effects, such as microvascular rupture and petechial hemorrhage (Miller and Gies, 2000a ; Miller and Quddus, 2000b ; Miller, 2007 ), in which microbubbles served as cavitation nuclei to induce cavitation (Miller and Thomas, 1995 ). These vascular effects could be therapeutically useful in thrombolysis and gene or drug delivery (Molina et al, 2006 ; Ferrara et al, 2007 ; Xie et al, 2009 ; Kutty et al, 2014 ; Sato et al, 2015 ; Burgess and Hynynen, 2016 ). Recently, some studies showed that the permeability of the BTB is increased by focused ultrasound and low-frequency ultrasound in the presence of an ultrasound contrast agent (Liu et al, 2006 ; Hynynen, 2008 ; Xia et al, 2012 ; Diaz et al, 2014 ; Aryal et al, 2015 ).…”