Tracer design for magnetic particle imaging (invited)

被引:84
作者
Ferguson, R. Matthew [1 ]
Khandhar, Amit P. [1 ]
Krishnan, Kannan M. [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Washington, Dept Mat Sci & Engn, Seattle, WA 98195 USA
关键词
NANOPARTICLES; SIZE;
D O I
10.1063/1.3676053
中图分类号
O59 [应用物理学];
学科分类号
070305 [高分子化学与物理];
摘要
Magnetic particle imaging (MPI) uses safe iron oxide nanoparticle tracers to offer fundamentally new capabilities for medical imaging, in applications as vascular imaging and ultra-sensitive cancer therapeutics. MPI is perhaps the first medical imaging platform to intrinsically exploit nanoscale material properties. MPI tracers contain magnetic nanoparticles whose tunable, size-dependent magnetic properties can be optimized by selecting a particular particle size and narrow size-distribution. In this paper we present experimental MPI measurements acquired using a homemade MPI magnetometer: a zero-dimensional MPI imaging system designed to characterize tracer performance by measuring the derivative of the time-varying tracer magnetization, M'(H(t)), at a driving frequency of 25 kHz. We show that MPI performance is optimized by selecting phase-pure magnetite tracers of a particular size and narrow size distribution; in this work, tracers with 20 nm median diameter, log-normal distribution shape parameter, sigma(v), equal to 0.26, and hydrodynamic diameter equal to 30 nm showed the best performance. Furthermore, these optimized MPI tracers show 4 x greater signal intensity (measured at the third harmonic) and 20% better spatial resolution compared with commercial nanoparticles developed for MRI. (C) 2012 American Institute of Physics. [doi: 10.1063/1.3676053]
引用
收藏
页数:5
相关论文
共 15 条
[1]
MEASUREMENTS OF PARTICLE-SIZE DISTRIBUTION PARAMETERS IN FERROFLUIDS [J].
CHANTRELL, RW ;
POPPLEWELL, J ;
CHARLES, SW .
IEEE TRANSACTIONS ON MAGNETICS, 1978, 14 (05) :975-977
[2]
How the size distribution of magnetic nanoparticles determines their magnetic particle imaging performance [J].
Eberbeck, D. ;
Wiekhorst, F. ;
Wagner, S. ;
Trahms, L. .
APPLIED PHYSICS LETTERS, 2011, 98 (18)
[3]
Optimizing magnetite nanoparticles for mass sensitivity in magnetic particle imaging [J].
Ferguson, R. Matthew ;
Minard, Kevin R. ;
Khandhar, Amit P. ;
Krishnan, Kannan M. .
MEDICAL PHYSICS, 2011, 38 (03) :1619-1626
[4]
Optimization of nanoparticle core size for magnetic particle imaging [J].
Ferguson, R. Matthew ;
Minard, Kevin R. ;
Krishnan, Kannan M. .
JOURNAL OF MAGNETISM AND MAGNETIC MATERIALS, 2009, 321 (10) :1548-1551
[5]
Tomographic imaging using the nonlinear response of magnetic particles [J].
Gleich, B ;
Weizenecker, R .
NATURE, 2005, 435 (7046) :1214-1217
[6]
Synthesis of magnetoliposomes with monodisperse iron oxide nanocrystal cores for hyperthermia [J].
Gonzales, M ;
Krishnan, KM .
JOURNAL OF MAGNETISM AND MAGNETIC MATERIALS, 2005, 293 (01) :265-270
[7]
Ferrohydrodynamic relaxometry for magnetic particle imaging [J].
Goodwill, P. W. ;
Tamrazian, A. ;
Croft, L. R. ;
Lu, C. D. ;
Johnson, E. M. ;
Pidaparthi, R. ;
Ferguson, R. M. ;
Khandhar, A. P. ;
Krishnan, K. M. ;
Conolly, S. M. .
APPLIED PHYSICS LETTERS, 2011, 98 (26)
[8]
The X-Space Formulation of the Magnetic Particle Imaging Process: 1-D Signal, Resolution, Bandwidth, SNR, SAR, and Magnetostimulation [J].
Goodwill, Patrick W. ;
Conolly, Steven M. .
IEEE TRANSACTIONS ON MEDICAL IMAGING, 2010, 29 (11) :1851-1859
[9]
Khandhar A. P., J BIOMED A IN PRESS
[10]
Monodispersed magnetite nanoparticles optimized for magnetic fluid hyperthermia: Implications in biological systems [J].
Khandhar, Amit P. ;
Ferguson, R. Matthew ;
Krishnan, Kannan M. .
JOURNAL OF APPLIED PHYSICS, 2011, 109 (07)