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Degradation, Metabolism and Relaxation Properties of Iron Oxide Particles for Magnetic Resonance ImagingBriley Saebo, Karen January 2004 (has links)
<p>Whereas the effect of size and coating material on the pharmacokinetics and biodistribution of iron oxide based contrast agents are well documented, the effect of these parameters on liver metabolism has never been investigated. The primary purpose of this work was to evaluate the effect of iron oxide particle size and coating on the rate of liver clearance and particle degradation using a rat model. </p><p>The magnetic and relaxation properties of five different iron oxide contrast agents were determined prior to the onset of the animal studies. The R2* values and the T1-enhancing efficacy of the agents were also evaluated in blood using phantom models. The results of these studies indicated that the efficacy of these agents was matrix and frequency dependent. Correlations between the R2* values and the magnetic properties of the agents were established and a new parameter, Msat/r1, was created to enable better estimations of contrast agent T1-enhancing efficacy in blood. </p><p>The bio-distribution of one of the agents was also evaluated to assess the importance of sub-cellular particle distribution, using an isolated rat liver cell model. Phantom models were also used to verify that materials with magnetic properties similar to the particle breakdown products (ferritin/hemosiderin) may induce signal reduction when compartmentalized in a liver cell suspension. The results revealed that the cellular distribution of the agent did not influence the rate of particle degradation. This finding conflicted with current theory. Additionally, the study indicated that the compartmentalization of magnetic materials similar to ferritin may induce significant signal loss.</p><p>Methods enabling the accurate determination of contrast agent concentration in the liver were developed and validated using one of the agents. From these measurements the liver half-life of the agent was estimated and compared to the rate of liver clearance, as determined from the evolution of the effective transverse relaxation rate (R2*) in rat liver. The results indicate that the liver R2* enhancement persisted at time points when the concentration of contrast agent present in the liver was below method detection limits. The prolonged R2* enhancement was believed to be a result of the compartmentalisation of the particle breakdown products within the liver cells. </p><p>Finally, the liver clearance and degradation rates of the five different iron oxide particles in rat liver were evaluated. The results revealed that for materials with similar iron oxide cores and particle sizes, the rate of liver clearance was affected by the coating material present. Materials with similar coating, but different sizes, exhibited similar rates of liver clearance.</p><p>In conclusion, the results of this work strongly suggest that coating material of the iron oxide particles may contribute significantly to the rate of iron oxide particle clearance and degradation in rat liver cells.</p>
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Degradation, Metabolism and Relaxation Properties of Iron Oxide Particles for Magnetic Resonance ImagingBriley Saebo, Karen January 2004 (has links)
Whereas the effect of size and coating material on the pharmacokinetics and biodistribution of iron oxide based contrast agents are well documented, the effect of these parameters on liver metabolism has never been investigated. The primary purpose of this work was to evaluate the effect of iron oxide particle size and coating on the rate of liver clearance and particle degradation using a rat model. The magnetic and relaxation properties of five different iron oxide contrast agents were determined prior to the onset of the animal studies. The R2* values and the T1-enhancing efficacy of the agents were also evaluated in blood using phantom models. The results of these studies indicated that the efficacy of these agents was matrix and frequency dependent. Correlations between the R2* values and the magnetic properties of the agents were established and a new parameter, Msat/r1, was created to enable better estimations of contrast agent T1-enhancing efficacy in blood. The bio-distribution of one of the agents was also evaluated to assess the importance of sub-cellular particle distribution, using an isolated rat liver cell model. Phantom models were also used to verify that materials with magnetic properties similar to the particle breakdown products (ferritin/hemosiderin) may induce signal reduction when compartmentalized in a liver cell suspension. The results revealed that the cellular distribution of the agent did not influence the rate of particle degradation. This finding conflicted with current theory. Additionally, the study indicated that the compartmentalization of magnetic materials similar to ferritin may induce significant signal loss. Methods enabling the accurate determination of contrast agent concentration in the liver were developed and validated using one of the agents. From these measurements the liver half-life of the agent was estimated and compared to the rate of liver clearance, as determined from the evolution of the effective transverse relaxation rate (R2*) in rat liver. The results indicate that the liver R2* enhancement persisted at time points when the concentration of contrast agent present in the liver was below method detection limits. The prolonged R2* enhancement was believed to be a result of the compartmentalisation of the particle breakdown products within the liver cells. Finally, the liver clearance and degradation rates of the five different iron oxide particles in rat liver were evaluated. The results revealed that for materials with similar iron oxide cores and particle sizes, the rate of liver clearance was affected by the coating material present. Materials with similar coating, but different sizes, exhibited similar rates of liver clearance. In conclusion, the results of this work strongly suggest that coating material of the iron oxide particles may contribute significantly to the rate of iron oxide particle clearance and degradation in rat liver cells.
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Influência de parâmetros moleculares em funções de correlação temporal na dinâmica de solvatação mecânica / Influence of molecular parameters on time correlations functions of mechanical solvation dynamicsMartins, Marcio Marques January 2004 (has links)
No presente trabalho descrevemos nossos resultados relativos à investigação da dinâmica de solvatação mecânica por meio de simulações por dinâmica molecular, respeitando o regime da resposta linear, em sistemas-modelo de argônio líquido com um soluto monoatômico ou diatômico dissolvido. Estudamos sistematicamente a influência dos parâmetros moleculares dos solutos (tamanho, polarizabilidade) e da densidade frente a vários modelos de solvatação. Funções de Correlação Temporal da Energia de Solvatação foram calculadas com relação à correlações de n-corpos (n = 2; 3) distinguindo interações repulsivas e atrativas para ambos os sistemas líquidos. Também obtivemos segundas derivadas temporais dessas funções referindo-se à parcelas translacionais, rotacionais e roto-translacionais na solução do diatômico. Encontramos que funções de correlação temporal coletivas podem ser razoavelmente bem aproximadas por correlações binárias a densidades baixas e, a densidades altas, correlações ternárias tornam-se mais importantes produzindo um descorrelacionamento mais rápido das funções coletivas devido a efeitos de cancelamento parciais. As funções de correlação para interações repulsivas e atrativas exibem comportamentos dinâmicos independentes do modelo de solvatação devido a fatores de escalonamento linear que afetam apenas as amplitudes das dessas funções de correlação temporal. Em geral, os sistemas com grau de liberdade rotacional apresentam tempos de correlação mais curtos para a dinâmica coletiva e tempos de correlação mais longos para as funções binárias e ternárias. Finalmente, esse estudo mostra que os sistemas contendo o diatômico relaxam-se predominantemente por mecanismos translacionais binários em modelos de solvatação envolvendo alterações apenas na polarizabilidade do soluto, e por mecanismos rotacionais atrativos binários em modelos envolvendo alterações no comprimento de ligação. / In the present work, we describe our results concerning our molecular dynamics investigation of the mechanical solvation dynamics within the linear response regime in model systems composed by liquid argon with a monoatomic or diatomic solute. The effect of molecular parameters (size, polarizability) and density has been elucidated for various solvation models. Time Correlation Functions for the solvation energy were calculated and separated into n-body (n = 2; 3) contributions distinguishing repulsive and attractive interactions in both liquid systems. In addition, we computed second time derivatives of these functions in order to describe translational, rotational, and roto-translational portions in the solutions containing the diatomics. We found that collective time correlation functions are well described by binary correlations at low liquid densities and, at high densities, ternary correlations become more important producing faster decaying collective time correlation functions due to partial cancellation effects. The repulsive and attractive time correlation functions exhibit a dynamic behavior that is independent on the solvation model due to linear scaling factors that only affect the absolute amplitudes of these functions. In general, the systems involving a rotational degree of freedom furnish smaller correlation times for the collective solvation dynamics, but stronger correlated two-body and three-body terms. Finally, this study shows that the solvation dynamics for the solution containing the diatomics relaxes predominatly by binary translational mechanisms when solvation models involving changes only in the polarizability parameter are considered. Binary attractive rotational mechanism become important in models with changes in the bond length.
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Influência de parâmetros moleculares em funções de correlação temporal na dinâmica de solvatação mecânica / Influence of molecular parameters on time correlations functions of mechanical solvation dynamicsMartins, Marcio Marques January 2004 (has links)
No presente trabalho descrevemos nossos resultados relativos à investigação da dinâmica de solvatação mecânica por meio de simulações por dinâmica molecular, respeitando o regime da resposta linear, em sistemas-modelo de argônio líquido com um soluto monoatômico ou diatômico dissolvido. Estudamos sistematicamente a influência dos parâmetros moleculares dos solutos (tamanho, polarizabilidade) e da densidade frente a vários modelos de solvatação. Funções de Correlação Temporal da Energia de Solvatação foram calculadas com relação à correlações de n-corpos (n = 2; 3) distinguindo interações repulsivas e atrativas para ambos os sistemas líquidos. Também obtivemos segundas derivadas temporais dessas funções referindo-se à parcelas translacionais, rotacionais e roto-translacionais na solução do diatômico. Encontramos que funções de correlação temporal coletivas podem ser razoavelmente bem aproximadas por correlações binárias a densidades baixas e, a densidades altas, correlações ternárias tornam-se mais importantes produzindo um descorrelacionamento mais rápido das funções coletivas devido a efeitos de cancelamento parciais. As funções de correlação para interações repulsivas e atrativas exibem comportamentos dinâmicos independentes do modelo de solvatação devido a fatores de escalonamento linear que afetam apenas as amplitudes das dessas funções de correlação temporal. Em geral, os sistemas com grau de liberdade rotacional apresentam tempos de correlação mais curtos para a dinâmica coletiva e tempos de correlação mais longos para as funções binárias e ternárias. Finalmente, esse estudo mostra que os sistemas contendo o diatômico relaxam-se predominantemente por mecanismos translacionais binários em modelos de solvatação envolvendo alterações apenas na polarizabilidade do soluto, e por mecanismos rotacionais atrativos binários em modelos envolvendo alterações no comprimento de ligação. / In the present work, we describe our results concerning our molecular dynamics investigation of the mechanical solvation dynamics within the linear response regime in model systems composed by liquid argon with a monoatomic or diatomic solute. The effect of molecular parameters (size, polarizability) and density has been elucidated for various solvation models. Time Correlation Functions for the solvation energy were calculated and separated into n-body (n = 2; 3) contributions distinguishing repulsive and attractive interactions in both liquid systems. In addition, we computed second time derivatives of these functions in order to describe translational, rotational, and roto-translational portions in the solutions containing the diatomics. We found that collective time correlation functions are well described by binary correlations at low liquid densities and, at high densities, ternary correlations become more important producing faster decaying collective time correlation functions due to partial cancellation effects. The repulsive and attractive time correlation functions exhibit a dynamic behavior that is independent on the solvation model due to linear scaling factors that only affect the absolute amplitudes of these functions. In general, the systems involving a rotational degree of freedom furnish smaller correlation times for the collective solvation dynamics, but stronger correlated two-body and three-body terms. Finally, this study shows that the solvation dynamics for the solution containing the diatomics relaxes predominatly by binary translational mechanisms when solvation models involving changes only in the polarizability parameter are considered. Binary attractive rotational mechanism become important in models with changes in the bond length.
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Influência de parâmetros moleculares em funções de correlação temporal na dinâmica de solvatação mecânica / Influence of molecular parameters on time correlations functions of mechanical solvation dynamicsMartins, Marcio Marques January 2004 (has links)
No presente trabalho descrevemos nossos resultados relativos à investigação da dinâmica de solvatação mecânica por meio de simulações por dinâmica molecular, respeitando o regime da resposta linear, em sistemas-modelo de argônio líquido com um soluto monoatômico ou diatômico dissolvido. Estudamos sistematicamente a influência dos parâmetros moleculares dos solutos (tamanho, polarizabilidade) e da densidade frente a vários modelos de solvatação. Funções de Correlação Temporal da Energia de Solvatação foram calculadas com relação à correlações de n-corpos (n = 2; 3) distinguindo interações repulsivas e atrativas para ambos os sistemas líquidos. Também obtivemos segundas derivadas temporais dessas funções referindo-se à parcelas translacionais, rotacionais e roto-translacionais na solução do diatômico. Encontramos que funções de correlação temporal coletivas podem ser razoavelmente bem aproximadas por correlações binárias a densidades baixas e, a densidades altas, correlações ternárias tornam-se mais importantes produzindo um descorrelacionamento mais rápido das funções coletivas devido a efeitos de cancelamento parciais. As funções de correlação para interações repulsivas e atrativas exibem comportamentos dinâmicos independentes do modelo de solvatação devido a fatores de escalonamento linear que afetam apenas as amplitudes das dessas funções de correlação temporal. Em geral, os sistemas com grau de liberdade rotacional apresentam tempos de correlação mais curtos para a dinâmica coletiva e tempos de correlação mais longos para as funções binárias e ternárias. Finalmente, esse estudo mostra que os sistemas contendo o diatômico relaxam-se predominantemente por mecanismos translacionais binários em modelos de solvatação envolvendo alterações apenas na polarizabilidade do soluto, e por mecanismos rotacionais atrativos binários em modelos envolvendo alterações no comprimento de ligação. / In the present work, we describe our results concerning our molecular dynamics investigation of the mechanical solvation dynamics within the linear response regime in model systems composed by liquid argon with a monoatomic or diatomic solute. The effect of molecular parameters (size, polarizability) and density has been elucidated for various solvation models. Time Correlation Functions for the solvation energy were calculated and separated into n-body (n = 2; 3) contributions distinguishing repulsive and attractive interactions in both liquid systems. In addition, we computed second time derivatives of these functions in order to describe translational, rotational, and roto-translational portions in the solutions containing the diatomics. We found that collective time correlation functions are well described by binary correlations at low liquid densities and, at high densities, ternary correlations become more important producing faster decaying collective time correlation functions due to partial cancellation effects. The repulsive and attractive time correlation functions exhibit a dynamic behavior that is independent on the solvation model due to linear scaling factors that only affect the absolute amplitudes of these functions. In general, the systems involving a rotational degree of freedom furnish smaller correlation times for the collective solvation dynamics, but stronger correlated two-body and three-body terms. Finally, this study shows that the solvation dynamics for the solution containing the diatomics relaxes predominatly by binary translational mechanisms when solvation models involving changes only in the polarizability parameter are considered. Binary attractive rotational mechanism become important in models with changes in the bond length.
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