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Injectable Thermogelling Nanostructured Ink as Simultaneous Optical and Magnetic Resonance Imaging Contrast Agent for Image-Guided Surgery.

Chiara CressoniSarah MalandraEmil MilanFederico BoschiElena NicolatoAlessandro NegriAlessandro VecciaPietro BontempiDomenico MangiameliSilvia PietrobonoDavide MelisiPasquina MarzolaAlessandro AntonelliAdolfo Speghini
Published in: Biomacromolecules (2024)
The development of efficient and biocompatible contrast agents is particularly urgent for modern clinical surgery. Nanostructured materials raised great interest as contrast agents for different imaging techniques, for which essential features are high contrasts, and in the case of precise clinical surgery, minimization of the signal spatial dispersion when embedded in biological tissues. This study deals with the development of a multimodal contrast agent based on an injectable hydrogel nanocomposite containing a lanthanide-activated layered double hydroxide coupled to a biocompatible dye (indocyanine green), emitting in the first biological window. This novel nanostructured thermogelling hydrogel behaves as an efficient tissue marker for optical and magnetic resonance imaging because the particular formulation strongly limits its spatial diffusion in biological tissue by exploiting a simple injection. The synergistic combination of these properties permits to employ the hydrogel ink simultaneously for both optical and magnetic resonance imaging, easy monitoring of the biological target, and, at the same time, increasing the spatial resolution during a clinical surgery. The biocompatibility and excellent performance as contrast agents are very promising for possible use in image-guided surgery, which is currently one of the most challenging topics in clinical research.
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