Back to Search
Start Over
Influence of molecular parameters and increasing magnetic field strength on relaxivity of gadolinium- and manganese-based T1 contrast agents
- Source :
- Contrast mediamolecular imaging. 4(2)
- Publication Year :
- 2009
-
Abstract
- Simulations were performed to understand the relative contributions of molecular parameters to longitudinal (r(1)) and transverse (r(2)) relaxivity as a function of applied field, and to obtain theoretical relaxivity maxima over a range of fields to appreciate what relaxivities can be achieved experimentally. The field-dependent relaxivities of a panel of gadolinium and manganese complexes with different molecular parameters, water exchange rates, rotational correlation times, hydration state, etc. were measured to confirm that measured relaxivities were consistent with theory. The design tenets previously stressed for optimizing r(1) at low fields (very slow rotational motion; chelate immobilized by protein binding; optimized water exchange rate) do not apply at higher fields. At 1.5 T and higher fields, an intermediate rotational correlation time is desired (0.5-4 ns), while water exchange rate is not as critical to achieving a high r(1). For targeted applications it is recommended to tether a multimer of metal chelates to a protein-targeting group via a long flexible linker to decouple the slow motion of the protein from the water(s) bound to the metal ions. Per ion relaxivities of 80, 45, and 18 mM(-1) s(-1) at 1.5, 3 and 9.4 T, respectively, are feasible for Gd(3+) and Mn(2+) complexes.
- Subjects :
- Relaxometry
Manganese
Field (physics)
Metal ions in aqueous solution
Gadolinium
Analytical chemistry
chemistry.chemical_element
Contrast Media
Magnetic Resonance Imaging
Article
Ion
Metal
chemistry
visual_art
visual_art.visual_art_medium
Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging
Rotational correlation time
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 15554317
- Volume :
- 4
- Issue :
- 2
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Contrast mediamolecular imaging
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....b7b1e1fcc7581518d3daeefdeb40e48c