Publication:
T-1-MRI Fluorescent Iron Oxide Nanoparticles by Microwave Assisted Synthesis

Loading...
Thumbnail Image
Identifiers

Publication date

Advisors

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publishers

Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute (MDPI)
Metrics
Google Scholar
Export

Research Projects

Organizational Units

Journal Issue

Abstract

Iron oxide nanoparticles have long been studied as a T-2 contrast agent in MRI due to their superparamagnetic behavior. T-1-based positive contrast, being much more favorable for clinical application due to brighter and more accurate signaling is, however, still limited to gadolinium- or manganese-based imaging tools. Though being the only available commercial positive-contrast agents, they lack an efficient argument when it comes to biological toxicity and their circulatory half-life in blood. The need arises to design a biocompatible contrast agent with a scope for easy surface functionalization for long circulation in blood and/or targeted imaging. We hereby propose an extremely fast microwave synthesis for fluorescein-labeled extremely-small iron oxide nanoparticles (fdIONP), in a single step, as a viable tool for cell labeling and T-1-MRI. We demonstrate the capabilities of such an approach through high-quality magnetic resonance angiographic images of mice.

Description

MeSH Terms

DeCS Terms

Bibliographic citation

Nanomaterials. 2015; 5(4):1880-90

Related dataset

Related publication

Document type