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Silicon Nanoparticles as Hyperpolarized Magnetic Resonance Imaging Agents

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2009

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American Chemical Society
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Aptekar, Jacob W., Maja C. Cassidy, Alexander C. Johnson, Robert A. Barton, Menyoung Lee, Alexander C. Ogier, Chinh Vo, et al. 2009. Silicon nanoparticles as hyperpolarized magnetic resonance imaging agents. ACS Nano 3(12): 4003-4008.

Abstract

Magnetic resonance imaging of hyperpolarized nuclei provides high image contrast with little or no background signal. To date, in vivo applications of prehyperpolarized materials have been limited by relatively short nuclear spin relaxation times. Here, we investigate silicon nanoparticles as a new type of hyperpolarized magnetic resonance imaging agent. Nuclear spin relaxation times for a variety of Si nanoparticles are found to be remarkably long, ranging from many minutes to hours at room temperature, allowing hyperpolarized nanoparticles to be transported, administered, and imaged on practical time scales. Additionally, we demonstrate that Si nanoparticles can be surface functionalized using techniques common to other biologically targeted nanoparticle systems. These results suggest that Si nanoparticles can be used as a targetable, hyperpolarized magnetic resonance imaging agent with a large range of potential applications.

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silicon nanoparticle, contrast agent, hyperpolarized, molecular imaging, functionalized nanoparticle, magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), nuclear magnetic resonance, nuclear spin relaxation

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