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1.
Small ; : e2403283, 2024 Aug 07.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39108190

RESUMEN

Superparamagnetic iron oxide nanoparticles (SPIOs) are used as tracers in Magnetic Particle Imaging (MPI). It is crucial to understand the magnetic properties of SPIOs for optimizing MPI imaging contrast, resolution, and sensitivity. Brownian and Néel relaxation theory developed in the early 1950s posits that relaxation times can vary with particle size, shell thickness, medium viscosity, and the applied field strength. Magnetic relaxation can soon provide a unique imaging capability, the ability to distinguish bound from unbound MPI tracers in vivo. Yet experimental validation of these theories has not been completed. In this paper, a novel method of pulsed magnetic field relaxometry is used to directly probe the relaxation behavior of superparamagnetic magnetite nanoparticles over a spectrum of magnetic field amplitudes, providing the first experimental validation of theoretical relaxation models. It is also shown that closed-form approximations generated in the early 1970s accurately match both data and numerical Fokker Planck computational models, which are computationally burdensome. This means researchers can trust these approximations for future modeling. All the findings can be translated to sinusoidal excitations used in conventional MPI scanning trajectories.

2.
Nano Lett ; 23(5): 1717-1725, 2023 Mar 08.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36821385

RESUMEN

Magnetic particle imaging (MPI) is a sensitive, high-contrast tracer modality that images superparamagnetic iron oxide nanoparticles, enabling radiation-free theranostic imaging. MPI resolution is currently limited by scanner and particle constraints. Recent tracers have experimentally shown 10× resolution and signal improvements with dramatically sharper M-H curves. Experiments show a dependence on interparticle interactions, conforming to literature definitions of superferromagnetism. We thus call our tracers superferromagnetic iron oxide nanoparticles (SFMIOs). While SFMIOs provide excellent signal and resolution, they exhibit hysteresis with non-negligible remanence and coercivity. We provide the first quantitative measurements of SFMIO remanence decay and reformation using a novel multiecho pulse sequence. We characterize MPI scanning with remanence decay and coercivity and describe an SNR-optimized pulse sequence for SFMIOs under human electromagnetic safety limitations. The resolution from SFMIOs could enable clinical MPI with 10× reduced scanner selection fields, reducing hardware costs by up to 100×.

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