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Polydisulfide Gd(III) chelates as biodegradable macromolecular magnetic resonance imaging contrast agents

Macromolecular gadolinium (Gd)(III) complexes have a prolonged blood circulation time and can preferentially accumulate in solid tumors, depending on the tumor blood vessel hyperpermeability, resulting in superior contrast enhancement in magnetic resonance (MR) cardiovascular imaging and cancer imag...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Lu, Zheng-Rong, Mohs, Aaron M, Zong, Yuda, Feng, Yi
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Dove Medical Press 2006
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2426761/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/17722260
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author Lu, Zheng-Rong
Mohs, Aaron M
Zong, Yuda
Feng, Yi
author_facet Lu, Zheng-Rong
Mohs, Aaron M
Zong, Yuda
Feng, Yi
author_sort Lu, Zheng-Rong
collection PubMed
description Macromolecular gadolinium (Gd)(III) complexes have a prolonged blood circulation time and can preferentially accumulate in solid tumors, depending on the tumor blood vessel hyperpermeability, resulting in superior contrast enhancement in magnetic resonance (MR) cardiovascular imaging and cancer imaging as shown in animal models. Unfortunately, safety concerns related to these agents’ slow elimination from the body impede their clinical development. Polydisulfide Gd(III) complexes have been designed and developed as biodegradable macromolecular magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) contrast agents to facilitate the clearance of Gd(III) complexes from the body after MRI examinations. These novel agents can act as macromolecular contrast agents for in vivo imaging and excrete rapidly as low-molecular-weight agents. The rationale and recent development of the novel biodegradable contrast agents are reviewed here. Polydisulfide Gd(III) complexes have relatively long blood circulation time and gradually degrade into small Gd(III) complexes, which are rapidly excreted via renal filtration. These agents result in effective and prolonged in vivo contrast enhancement in the blood pool and tumor tissue in animal models, yet demonstrate minimal Gd(III) tissue retention as the clinically used low-molecular-weight agents. Structural modification of the agents can readily alter the contrast-enhancement kinetics. Polydisulfide Gd(III) complexes are promising for further clinical development as safe, effective, biodegradable macromolecular MRI contrast agents for cardiovascular and cancer imaging, and for evaluation of therapeutic response.
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spelling pubmed-24267612008-06-20 Polydisulfide Gd(III) chelates as biodegradable macromolecular magnetic resonance imaging contrast agents Lu, Zheng-Rong Mohs, Aaron M Zong, Yuda Feng, Yi Int J Nanomedicine Review Macromolecular gadolinium (Gd)(III) complexes have a prolonged blood circulation time and can preferentially accumulate in solid tumors, depending on the tumor blood vessel hyperpermeability, resulting in superior contrast enhancement in magnetic resonance (MR) cardiovascular imaging and cancer imaging as shown in animal models. Unfortunately, safety concerns related to these agents’ slow elimination from the body impede their clinical development. Polydisulfide Gd(III) complexes have been designed and developed as biodegradable macromolecular magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) contrast agents to facilitate the clearance of Gd(III) complexes from the body after MRI examinations. These novel agents can act as macromolecular contrast agents for in vivo imaging and excrete rapidly as low-molecular-weight agents. The rationale and recent development of the novel biodegradable contrast agents are reviewed here. Polydisulfide Gd(III) complexes have relatively long blood circulation time and gradually degrade into small Gd(III) complexes, which are rapidly excreted via renal filtration. These agents result in effective and prolonged in vivo contrast enhancement in the blood pool and tumor tissue in animal models, yet demonstrate minimal Gd(III) tissue retention as the clinically used low-molecular-weight agents. Structural modification of the agents can readily alter the contrast-enhancement kinetics. Polydisulfide Gd(III) complexes are promising for further clinical development as safe, effective, biodegradable macromolecular MRI contrast agents for cardiovascular and cancer imaging, and for evaluation of therapeutic response. Dove Medical Press 2006-03 /pmc/articles/PMC2426761/ /pubmed/17722260 Text en © 2006 Dove Medical Press Limited. All rights reserved
spellingShingle Review
Lu, Zheng-Rong
Mohs, Aaron M
Zong, Yuda
Feng, Yi
Polydisulfide Gd(III) chelates as biodegradable macromolecular magnetic resonance imaging contrast agents
title Polydisulfide Gd(III) chelates as biodegradable macromolecular magnetic resonance imaging contrast agents
title_full Polydisulfide Gd(III) chelates as biodegradable macromolecular magnetic resonance imaging contrast agents
title_fullStr Polydisulfide Gd(III) chelates as biodegradable macromolecular magnetic resonance imaging contrast agents
title_full_unstemmed Polydisulfide Gd(III) chelates as biodegradable macromolecular magnetic resonance imaging contrast agents
title_short Polydisulfide Gd(III) chelates as biodegradable macromolecular magnetic resonance imaging contrast agents
title_sort polydisulfide gd(iii) chelates as biodegradable macromolecular magnetic resonance imaging contrast agents
topic Review
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2426761/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/17722260
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