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MRI of perfluorocarbon emulsion kinetics in rodent mammary tumours

Xiaobing Fan et al 2006 Phys. Med. Biol. 51 211-220   doi: 10.1088/0031-9155/51/2/002  Help

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Xiaobing Fan1, Jonathan N River1, Adrian S Muresan1, Carmen Popescu2, Marta Zamora1, Rita M Culp1 and Gregory S Karczmar1
1 Department of Radiology, University of Chicago, Chicago, IL 60637, USA
2 Institute of Tuberculosis Research, University of Illinois at Chicago, Chicago, IL 60621, USA
E-mail: gskarczm@uchicago.edu

Abstract. Perfluorocarbon (PFC) emulsions can be imaged directly by fluorine-19 MRI. We developed an optimized protocol for preparing PFC droplets of uniform size, evaluated use of the resulting droplets as blood pool contrast agents, studied their uptake by tumours and determined the spatial resolution with which they can be imaged at 4.7 T. Perfluorocarbon droplets of three different average sizes (324, 293 and 225 nm) were prepared using a microemulsifier. Images of PFC droplets with good signal-to-noise ratio were acquired with 625 µm in-plane resolution, 3 mm slice thickness and acquisition time of ~4.5 min per image. Kinetics of washout were determined using a simple mathematical model. The maximum uptake of the PFC droplets was three times greater at the tumour rim than in muscle, but the washout rate was two to three times slower in the tumour. The results are consistent with leakage of the droplets into the tumour extravascular space due to the hyper-permeability of tumour capillaries. PFC droplets may allow practical and quantitative measurements of blood volume and capillary permeability in tumours with reasonable spatial resolution.

Print publication: Issue 2 (21 January 2006)
Received 10 August 2005, in final form 4 November 2005
Published 21 December 2005

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