NEWS: Cobalt Nanoparticles Boost Imaging Sensitivity and Edge Detection
http://www.physorg.com/print157309129.html
Cobalt Nanoparticles Boost Imaging Sensitivity and Edge Detection
March 26th, 2009 in
Nanotechnology / Bio & Medicine
(PhysOrg.com) -- Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) can serve as a
very sensitive technique for detecting small tumors in the body, but it is not
as good at identifying the edges of a tumor. Photoacoustic imaging tomography
(PAT) is not as sensitive as MRI, but it excels at pinpointing the location of
subsurface tissue structures, presumably including the edges of tumors. To take
advantage of the best of both of these imaging techniques, a team of
investigators led by Fanqing Frank Chen, Ph.D., University of California, San
Francisco, has developed a “nanowonton” of cobalt and gold to create
an imaging contrast agent for use with both MRI and PAT.
Reporting its work in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
of the United States of America, this team describes how it created the
imaging agent by first preparing cobalt
nanoparticles and then
coating them with a uniform layer of gold. Cobalt nanoparticles are highly
effective as MRI contrast
enhancing agents, but by themselves, they are not suitable for use in humans.
The gold layer not only makes the nanoparticles biocompatible but also adds PAT
contrast enhancement as a particle characteristic. The investigators designed
the gold coating to
have a shape and thickness that maximizes the PAT response to a 700-nm imaging
laser.
Imaging experiments with these nanowontons showed that they are detectable
at low picomolar levels using MRI. This level of sensitivity would likely be
sufficient to spot very small tumors in the body. Additional experiments
confirmed that PAT was able to detect particle edges, which is where the PAT
signal drops off dramatically. The investigators note that they are now
experimenting with other nanoparticle shapes, particularly nanorods, with the
goal of increasing MRI sensitivity. The researchers also note that with proper
particle design, these hybrid nanomaterials also could serve as photothermal
agents that could kill tumors by cooking them to death when energized by light.
This work, which is detailed in the paper “Picomolar sensitivity MRI
and photoacoustic imaging of cobalt nanoparticles,” was supported in part
by the National Cancer Institute’s Specialized Program of Research
Excellence (SPORE). Investigators from the University of California, Los
Angeles, Lahore University in Pakistan, Bruker Optics, University of Michigan,
and the University of California, Berkeley, also participated in this study. An
abstract of this paper is available at the journal’s Web site.
Provided by National Cancer Institute
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