| Literature DB >> 30215442 |
Meiling Tan1, Blanca Del Rosal2, Yuqi Zhang1, Emma Martín Rodríguez3, Jie Hu4, Zhigang Zhou5, Rongwei Fan5, Dirk H Ortgies4, Nuria Fernández6, Irene Chaves-Coira7, Ángel Núñez7, Daniel Jaque4, Guanying Chen1.
Abstract
Biomedicine is continuously demanding new luminescent materials to be used as optical probes for the acquisition of high resolution, high contrast and high penetration in vivo images. These materials, in combination with advanced techniques, could constitute the first step towards new diagnosis and therapy tools. In this work, we report on the synthesis of long lifetime rare-earth-doped fluoride nanoparticles by adopting different strategies: core/shell and dopant engineering. The here developed nanoparticles show intense infrared emission in the second biological window with a long luminescence lifetime close to 1 millisecond. These two properties make the here presented nanoparticles excellent candidates for time-gated infrared optical bioimaging. Indeed, their potential application as optical imaging contrast agents for autofluorescence-free in vivo small animal imaging has been demonstrated, allowing high contrast real-time tracking of gastrointestinal absorption of nanoparticles and transcranial imaging of intracerebrally injected nanoparticles in the murine brain.Entities:
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Year: 2018 PMID: 30215442 DOI: 10.1039/c8nr02382d
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nanoscale ISSN: 2040-3364 Impact factor: 7.790