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Relaxivity of Gd-Based MRI Contrast Agents in Crosslinked Hyaluronic Acid as a Model for Tissues.

Marco FragaiEnrico RaveraFabio TedoldiClaudio LuchinatGiacomo Parigi
Published in: Chemphyschem : a European journal of chemical physics and physical chemistry (2019)
The efficiency of MRI contrast agents depends on the relaxation rate enhancement that they can induce at imaging fields. It is well known that, at these fields, large relaxation rates are obtained by binding of gadolinium(III) ions to large molecules. By the same token, the interaction of the gadolinium(III) complexes with macromolecules that are found in biological tissues can be responsible for an increase of the relaxation rate with respect to the value observed in liquids. We investigate here the relaxation enhancement of gadoteridol (Gd-HP-DO3A) in crosslinked hyaluronic acid, taken as model tissue, using fast field-cycling relaxometry. The analysis of the relaxation profiles as a function of the magnetic fields indicates that a sizable increase in the relaxation rates is due to a modest interaction of the contrast agent with the hydrogel and to the slower mobility of the water molecules outside the first-coordination sphere of the gadolinium(III) ion.
Keyphrases
  • hyaluronic acid
  • contrast enhanced
  • single molecule
  • magnetic resonance imaging
  • magnetic resonance
  • computed tomography
  • gene expression
  • diffusion weighted imaging
  • high resolution
  • fluorescence imaging