| Literature DB >> 28926276 |
David S Li1,2, Soon Joon Yoon2, Ivan Pelivanov2, Martin Frenz3, Matthew O'Donnell2, Lilo D Pozzo1.
Abstract
A new contrast agent for combined photoacoustic and ultrasound imaging is presented. It has a liquid perfluorocarbon (PFC) core of about 250 nm diameter coated by a 30 nm thin polypyrrole (PPy) doped polymer shell emulsion that represents a broadband absorber covering the visible and near-infrared ranges (peak optical extinction at 1050 nm). When exposed to a sufficiently high intensity optical or acoustic pulse, the droplets vaporize to form microbubbles providing a strong increase in imaging sensitivity and specificity. The threshold for contrast agent activation can further drastically be reduced by up to 2 orders of magnitude if simultaneously exposing them with optical and acoustic pulses. The selection of PFC core liquids with low boiling points (i.e., perfluorohexane (56 °C), perfluoropentane (29 °C), and perfluorobutane (-2 °C)) facilitates activation and reduces the activation threshold of PPy-coated emulsion contrast agents to levels well within clinical safety limits (as low as 0.2 MPa at 1 mJ/cm2). Finally, the potential use of these nanoemulsions as a contrast agent is demonstrated in a series of phantom imaging studies.Entities:
Keywords: Photoacoustics; bubbles; cavitation; contrast agents; nanoemulsions; sono-photoacoustics
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28926276 PMCID: PMC5636685 DOI: 10.1021/acs.nanolett.7b02845
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nano Lett ISSN: 1530-6984 Impact factor: 11.189