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. 2001 May;80(5):2483-6.
doi: 10.1016/S0006-3495(01)76217-0.

Magnetic resonance of a dextran-coated magnetic fluid intravenously administered in mice

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Magnetic resonance of a dextran-coated magnetic fluid intravenously administered in mice

L M Lacava et al. Biophys J. 2001 May.

Abstract

Magnetic resonance was used to investigate the kinetic disposition of magnetite nanoparticles (9.4 nm core diameter) from the blood circulation after intravenous injection of magnetite-based dextran-coated magnetic fluid in female Swiss mice. In the first 60 min the time-decay of the nanoparticle concentration in the blood circulation follows the one-exponential (one-compartment) model with a half-life of (6.9 +/- 0.7) min. The X-band spectra show a broad single line at g approximately 2, typical of nanomagnetic particles suspended in a nonmagnetic matrix. The resonance field shifts toward higher values as the particle concentration reduces, following two distinct regimes. At the higher concentration regime (above 10(14) cm(-3)) the particle-particle interaction responds for the nonlinear behavior, while at the lower concentration regime (below 10(14) cm(-3)) the particle-particle interaction is ruled out and the system recovers the linearity due to the demagnetizing field effect alone.

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References

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