Abstract

Vascular lesions are symptomatic of lifestyle-related diseases and include blood clots, coarctations, aneurysms, and apoplexy. Furthermore, increased blood vessel permeability is usually observed in tumors. To develop therapeutic drugs treating vascular lesions and tumors, methods with which the vascular abnormalities can be readily assessed in experimental animals are necessary. In this paper, a laboratory-size magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) system with permanent magnets, a compact-type MRI, was used to assess vascular abnormalities. Blood vessels in the head of a mouse were clearly visualized with the compact-type MRI in combination with gadolinium-diethylenetriamine-N,N,N',N″,N″-pentaacetic acid chelate (Gd-DTPA)-linked dextran (Gd-Dex) as blood pool contrast agents. The rat middle cerebral artery was imaged, and artery occlusion was identified. The difference between normal and occluded rats became more apparent upon intravenous injection of sodium nitroprusside, a nitric oxide (NO) donor. The system also visualized poor circulation in a rat saphenous artery by femoral artery occlusion. In a tumor-bearing mouse, a compact-type MRI visualized accumulation of Gd-Dex similar to that of small molecular Gd-DTPA, in the rim of tumor. Gd-Dex accumulation was more consistent than that of Gd-DTPA. Tumor vasculature was characterized by estimating the plasma-to-tumor interstitial tissue transfer constant, Ktrans, of Gd-Dex and fractional plasma volume, Vp, using image data. These results demonstrate the efficacy of a compact-type MRI in combination with Gd-Dex for vascular abnormality assessment in both mice and rats.

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