scholarly journals Development of Molecular Magnetic Resonance Imaging Tools for Risk Stratification of Carotid Atherosclerotic Disease Using Dual-Targeted Microparticles of Iron Oxide

Author(s):  
Joyce M. S. Chan ◽  
Park Sung Jin ◽  
Michael Ng ◽  
Joanne Garnell ◽  
Chan Wan Ying ◽  
...  

AbstractIdentification of patients with high-risk asymptomatic carotid plaques remains a challenging but crucial step in stroke prevention. Inflammation is the key factor that drives plaque instability. Currently, there is no imaging tool in routine clinical practice to assess the inflammatory status within atherosclerotic plaques. We have developed a molecular magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) tool to quantitatively report the inflammatory activity in atherosclerosis using dual-targeted microparticles of iron oxide (DT-MPIO) against P-selectin and VCAM-1 as a smart MRI probe. A periarterial cuff was used to generate plaques with varying degree of phenotypes, inflammation and risk levels at specific locations along the same single carotid artery in an Apolipoprotein-E-deficient mouse model. Using this platform, we demonstrated that in vivo DT-MPIO-enhanced MRI can (i) target high-risk vulnerable plaques, (ii) differentiate the heterogeneity (i.e. high vs intermediate vs low-risk plaques) within the asymptomatic plaque population and (iii) quantitatively report the inflammatory activity of local plaques in carotid artery. This novel molecular MRI tool may allow characterisation of plaque vulnerability and quantitative reporting of inflammatory status in atherosclerosis. This would permit accurate risk stratification by identifying high-risk asymptomatic individual patients for prophylactic carotid intervention, expediting early stroke prevention and paving the way for personalised management of carotid atherosclerotic disease.

Circulation ◽  
2008 ◽  
Vol 118 (suppl_18) ◽  
Author(s):  
Constantin von zur Muehlen ◽  
Dominik Elverfeldt ◽  
Julia Moeller ◽  
Robin Choudhury ◽  
Christoph Hagemeyer ◽  
...  

Platelets are the key to thrombus formation in atherothrombosis and play a major role in plaque rupture. Non-invasive imaging of activated platelets would be of great clinical interest. Here, we evaluate the ability of a magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) contrast agent consisting of microparticles of iron oxide (MPIO) and a single-chain antibody targeting ligand-induced binding sites (LIBS) on activated GPIIb/IIIa to image carotid artery thrombosis and. Anti-LIBS or control antibody were conjugated to 1μm-sized MPIOs (LIBS-MPIO/control-MPIO). Non-occlusive wall-adherent thrombi were induced in BL/6 mice using 6% ferric chloride. MRI (at 9.4 Tesla) of the carotid artery was performed once before (figure , A) and repeatedly in 12min long sequences after LIBS-MPIO/control-MPIO injection. After 36min, a significant signal void, which is the typical effect of iron oxide-based contrast agents, was observed with LIBS-MPIO (figure , B), but not control-MPIO (P<0.01) and corresponded to LIBS-MPIO binding as confirmed by histology. After thrombolysis, in LIBS-MPIO injected mice the signal void subsided, indicating successful thrombolysis (figure , C). On histology, MPIO-content of thrombus, as well as thrombus size, correlated significantly with LIBS-MPIO-induced signal void (both P<0.01). LIBS-MPIO allows in vivo MRI of activated platelets with excellent contrast properties and monitoring of thrombolytic therapy. This approach represents a novel non-invasive technique allowing rapid detection and quantification of platelet-containing thrombi, such as found on the surface of ruptured atherosclerotic plaques.


Stroke ◽  
2017 ◽  
Vol 48 (3) ◽  
pp. 678-685 ◽  
Author(s):  
Akram A. Hosseini ◽  
Richard J. Simpson ◽  
Nishath Altaf ◽  
Philip M. Bath ◽  
Shane T. MacSweeney ◽  
...  

2021 ◽  
Vol 9 (7) ◽  
pp. 1781-1786
Author(s):  
Ze’ai Wang ◽  
Yanfeng Wang ◽  
Yuan Wang ◽  
Chaogang Wei ◽  
Yibin Deng ◽  
...  

Biomineralized iron oxide–polydopamine hybrid nanodots are constructed using albumin nanoreactors to facilitate contrast-enhanced T1-weighted magnetic resonance imaging as well as photothermal therapeutic efficacy.


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