Low-boiling Point Perfluorocarbon Nanodroplets as Dual-Phase Dual-Modality MR/US Contrast Agent
Christian T., McHugh, Phillip G., Durham, Sebastian, Atalla, Michele, Kelley, Nicholas J., Bryden, Paul A., Dayton, Rosa T., Branca
ChemPhysChem |
Detection of bare gas microbubbles by magnetic resonance (MR) at low concentrations typically used in clinical contrast-ultrasound studies was recently demonstrated using hyperCEST. Despite the enhanced sensitivity achieved with hyperCEST, in vivo translation is challenging as on-resonance saturation of the gas-phase core of microbubbles consequently results in saturation of the gas-phase hyperpolarized 129Xe within the lungs. Alternatively, microbubbles can be condensed into the liquid phase to form perfluorocarbon nanodroplets, where 129Xe resonates at a chemical shift that is separated from the gas-phase signal in the lungs. For ultrasound applications, nanodroplets can be acoustically reverted back into their microbubble form to act as a phase-change contrast agent. Here, we show that low-boiling point perfluorocarbons, both in their liquid and gas form, generate phase-dependent hyperCEST contrast. Magnetic resonance detection of ultrasound-mediated phase transition demonstrates that these perfluorocarbons could be used as a dual-phase dual-modality MR/US contrast agent.