| Literature DB >> 26441654 |
Vera Paefgen1, Dennis Doleschel1, Fabian Kiessling1.
Abstract
Ultrasound (US) is one of the most frequently used diagnostic methods. It is a non-invasive, comparably inexpensive imaging method with a broad spectrum of applications, which can be increased even more by using bubbles as contrast agents (CAs). There are various different types of bubbles: filled with different gases, composed of soft- or hard-shell materials, and ranging in size from nano- to micrometers. These intravascular CAs enable functional analyses, e.g., to acquire organ perfusion in real-time. Molecular analyses are achieved by coupling specific ligands to the bubbles' shell, which bind to marker molecules in the area of interest. Bubbles can also be loaded with or attached to drugs, peptides or genes and can be destroyed by US pulses to locally release the entrapped agent. Recent studies show that US CAs are also valuable tools in hyperthermia-induced ablation therapy of tumors, or can increase cellular uptake of locally released drugs by enhancing membrane permeability. This review summarizes important steps in the development of US CAs and introduces the current clinical applications of contrast-enhanced US. Additionally, an overview of the recent developments in US probe design for functional and molecular diagnosis as well as for drug delivery is given.Entities:
Keywords: contrast agent; drug delivery; microbubbles; molecular imaging; nanobubbles; theranostics; ultrasound
Year: 2015 PMID: 26441654 PMCID: PMC4584939 DOI: 10.3389/fphar.2015.00197
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Pharmacol ISSN: 1663-9812 Impact factor: 5.810
Ultrasound contrast agent that have/had been clinically approved.
| Name | First approved for clinical use | Shell material | Gas | Application (examples) | Producer/distributor | Countries |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Optison | 1998 | Cross-linked serum albumin | Octafluoropropane | Left ventricular opafication | GE healthcare, Buckinghamshire, UK | US, Europe |
| Sonazoid | 2007 | Phospholipid | Perfluorobutane | Myocardial perfusion, liver imaging | GE healthcare, Buckinghamshire, UK/Daiichi Saniko, Tokyo, JP | Japan, South Korea |
| Lumason/SonoVue | 2001/2014 | Phospholipid | Sulphurhexafluoride | Left ventricular opafication, microvascular enhancement (liver and breast lesion detection) | Bracco diagnostics, Milano, Italy | US, Europe, China |
| Definity/Luminity | 2001/2006 | Phospholipid | Octafluoropropane | Echocardiography, liver/kidney imaging (Canada) | Lantheus medical Imaging, North Billerica, MA | North America, Europe (approval filed) |
| Imagent/Imavist | 2002, withdrawn | Phospholipid | Perfluorohexane, Nitrogen | Echocardiography, heart perfusion, tumor/blood flow anomalies | Schering AG, Berlin, DE | US |
| Echovist | 1991, withdrawn | Galactose microparticles | Air | Right heart imaging | Schering AG, Berlin, DE | Germany, UK |
| Levovist | 1995, withdrawn | Galactose microparticles, palmitic acid | Air | Whole heart imaging, doppler imaging | Schering AG, Berlin, DE | Canada, Europe, China, Japan |
| Albunex | 1993, withdrawn | Sonicated serum albumin | air | Transpulmonary imaging | Molecular Biosystems Inc., San Diego, CA, USA | Japan, US |