Temperature-Dependent Changes in Resolution and Coercivity of Superparamagnetic and Superferromagnetic Iron Oxide Nanoparticles.


Journal

International journal on magnetic particle imaging
ISSN: 2365-9033
Titre abrégé: Int J Magn Part Imaging
Pays: Germany
ID NLM: 101705792

Informations de publication

Date de publication:
2023
Historique:
medline: 1 1 2023
pubmed: 1 1 2023
entrez: 20 9 2024
Statut: ppublish

Résumé

Magnetic Particle Imaging (MPI) is a tracer-based imaging modality with immense promise as a radiation-free alternative to nuclear medicine imaging techniques. Nuclear medicine requires "hot chemistry" wherein radioactive tracers must be synthesized on-site, requiring expensive infrastructure and labor costs. MPI's magnetic nanoparticles, superparamagnetic iron oxide nanoparticles (SPIOs), have no significant signal decay over time which removes cost barriers associated with nuclear medicine studies such as FDG-PET. While SPIOs are the current industry standard MPI tracer, recent developments in synthesizing superferromagnetic iron oxide nanoparticles (SFMIOs) and high resolution SPIOs (HR-SPIOs), a new class of nanoparticle with almost zero coercivity, have yielded a 30-fold improvement in resolution (0.4 mT) and SNR. To better understand the long-term performance of these new nanoparticles, this investigation reports changes in SPIO (VivoTrax Plus), HR-SPIO, and SFMIO resolution, along with SFMIO coercivity, at low temperatures (-2, 2 °C) and room temperature (18-22 °C) over 12 weeks. We find that changes in HR-SPIO resolution are more sensitive to storage temperature than SFMIOs. Additionally, we observe no appreciable difference in SFMIO coercivity between the two temperatures over time. These results can inform research on optimizing tracer synthesis while lending practical information to future hospitals about the highly accessible conditions for the transit and storage of tracers.

Identifiants

pubmed: 39301437
doi: 10.18416/IJMPI.2023.2303056
pmc: PMC11412576
pii:
doi:

Types de publication

Journal Article

Langues

eng

Déclaration de conflit d'intérêts

COI Disclosure: Dr. Steven Conolly is a co-founder and holds stock of a startup company that manufactures and sells preclinical MPI scanners and tracers.

Auteurs

Owen Doyle (O)

Department of Bioengineering, UC Berkeley, Berkeley CA, USA.

Jacob Bryan (J)

Department of Bioengineering, UC Berkeley, Berkeley CA, USA.
Magnetic Insight, Alameda CA, USA.

Melissa Kim (M)

Department of Bioengineering, UC Berkeley, Berkeley CA, USA.

Chinmoy Saayujya (C)

Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Sciences, UC Berkeley, Berkeley CA, USA.

Sophie Nazarian (S)

Department of Bioengineering, UC Berkeley, Berkeley CA, USA.

Javier Mokkarala-Lopez (J)

Department of Bioengineering, UC Berkeley, Berkeley CA, USA.

Renesmee Kuo (R)

Department of Bioengineering, UC Berkeley, Berkeley CA, USA.

Mariam Yousuf (M)

Department of Bioengineering, UC Berkeley, Berkeley CA, USA.

Prashant Chandrasekharan (P)

Department of Bioengineering, UC Berkeley, Berkeley CA, USA.

Benjamin Fellows (B)

Department of Bioengineering, UC Berkeley, Berkeley CA, USA.
Magnetic Insight, Alameda CA, USA.

Steven Conolly (S)

Department of Bioengineering, UC Berkeley, Berkeley CA, USA.
Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Sciences, UC Berkeley, Berkeley CA, USA.

Classifications MeSH