High-resolution T1 MRI via renally clearable dextran nanoparticles with an iron oxide shell.
Tae-Hyun ShinPan Ki KimSunghwi KangJiyong CheongSoojin KimYongjun LimWookjin ShinJoon-Yong JungJungsu D LahByoung Wook ChoiJinwoo CheonPublished in: Nature biomedical engineering (2021)
Contrast agents for magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) improve anatomical visualizations. However, owing to poor image resolution in whole-body MRI, resolving fine structures is challenging. Here, we report that a nanoparticle with a polysaccharide supramolecular core and a shell of amorphous-like hydrous ferric oxide generating strong T1 MRI contrast (with a relaxivity coefficient ratio of ~1.2) facilitates the imaging, at resolutions of the order of a few hundred micrometres, of cerebral, coronary and peripheral microvessels in rodents and of lower-extremity vessels in rabbits. The nanoparticle can be synthesized at room temperature in aqueous solution and in the absence of surfactants, has blood circulation and renal clearance profiles that prevent opsonization, and leads to better imaging performance than Dotarem (gadoterate meglumine), a clinically approved gadolinium-based MRI contrast agent. The nanoparticle's biocompatibility and imaging performance may prove advantageous in a broad range of preclinical and clinical applications of MRI.
Keyphrases
- contrast enhanced
- magnetic resonance imaging
- high resolution
- diffusion weighted imaging
- room temperature
- computed tomography
- magnetic resonance
- iron oxide
- stem cells
- machine learning
- coronary artery disease
- aqueous solution
- blood brain barrier
- coronary artery
- bone marrow
- air pollution
- left ventricular
- quantum dots
- atrial fibrillation
- photodynamic therapy
- chemotherapy induced
- fluorescence imaging