| Literature DB >> 32510845 |
Nian Liu1,2, Junpeng Shi3, Qiang Wang4, Jingru Guo1, Zhenyu Hou4, Xinhui Su4, Hongwu Zhang3,5, Xiaolian Sun1,4.
Abstract
Persistent luminescence nanoparticles (PLNPs) with rechargeable near-infrared afterglow properties attract much attention for tumor diagnosis in living animals since they can avoid tissue autofluorescence and greatly improve the signal-to-background ratio. Using UV, visible light, or X-ray as excitation sources to power up persistent luminescence (PL) faces the challenges such as limited tissue penetration, inefficient charging capability, or tissue damage caused by irradiation. Here, it is proved that radiopharmaceuticals can efficiently excite ZnGa2 O4 :Cr3+ nanoparticles (ZGCs) for both fluorescence and afterglow luminescence via Cerenkov resonance energy transfer as well as ionizing radiation. 18 F-FDG, a clinically approved tumor-imaging radiopharmaceutical with a short decay half-life around 110 min, is successfully used as the internal light source to in vivo excite intravenously injected ZGCs for tumor luminescence imaging over 3 h. The luminescence with similar decay time can be re-obtained for multiple times upon injection of 18 F-FDG at any time needed with no health concern. It is believed this strategy can not only provide tumor luminescence imaging with high sensitivity, high contrast, and long decay time at desired time, but also guarantee the patients much less radiation exposure, greatly benefiting image-guided surgery in the future.Entities:
Keywords: in vivo activation; long-term imaging; persistent luminescence; radiopharmaceuticals
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Year: 2020 PMID: 32510845 DOI: 10.1002/smll.202001494
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Small ISSN: 1613-6810 Impact factor: 13.281