| Literature DB >> 32091159 |
Zhenni Wei1,2,3, Zhenqi Jiang1, Chunshu Pan4, Jianbi Xia4, Kaiwei Xu5, Ting Xue1, Bo Yuan1, Ozioma Udochukwu Akakuru1, Chengjie Zhu1, Guilong Zhang6, Zheng Mao7, Xiaozhong Qiu2, Aiguo Wu1, Zheyu Shen2.
Abstract
The market of available contrast agents for clinical magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) has been dominated by gadolinium (Gd) chelates based T1 contrast agents for decades. However, there are growing concerns about their safety because they are retained in the body and are nephrotoxic, which necessitated a warning by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration against the use of such contrast agents. To ameliorate these problems, it is necessary to improve the MRI efficiency of such contrast agents to allow the administration of much reduced dosages. In this study, a ten-gram-scale facile method is developed to synthesize organogadolinium complex nanoparticles (i.e., reductive bovine serum albumin stabilized Gd-salicylate nanoparticles, GdSalNPs-rBSA) with high r1 value of 19.51 mm-1 s-1 and very low r2 /r1 ratio of 1.21 (B0 = 1.5 T) for high-contrast T1 -weighted MRI of tumors. The GdSalNPs-rBSA nanoparticles possess more advantages including low synthesis cost (≈0.54 USD per g), long in vivo circulation time (t1/2 = 6.13 h), almost no Gd3+ release, and excellent biosafety. Moreover, the GdSalNPs-rBSA nanoparticles demonstrate excellent in vivo MRI contrast enhancement (signal-to-noise ratio (ΔSNR) ≈ 220%) for tumor diagnosis.Entities:
Keywords: contrast agents; magnetic resonance imaging; organogadolinium complex nanoparticles; ten-gram-scale facile synthesis; tumor diagnosis
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Year: 2020 PMID: 32091159 DOI: 10.1002/smll.201906870
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Small ISSN: 1613-6810 Impact factor: 13.281