Manganese-52 positron emission tomography tracer characterization and initial results in phantoms and in vivo

被引:46
|
作者
Topping, Geoffrey J. [1 ]
Schaffer, Paul [2 ]
Hoehr, Cornelia [2 ]
Ruth, Thomas J. [2 ]
Sossi, Vesna [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ British Columbia, Dept Phys & Astron, Vancouver, BC V6T 2B5, Canada
[2] TRIUMF, Nucl Med, Vancouver, BC V6T 2A3, Canada
基金
加拿大自然科学与工程研究理事会;
关键词
Manganese-52; PET; MANGANESE-ENHANCED MRI; BRAIN; ACTIVATION; SIMULATION; EMITTERS; CHROMIUM; SCANNER;
D O I
10.1118/1.4793756
中图分类号
R8 [特种医学]; R445 [影像诊断学];
学科分类号
1002 ; 100207 ; 1009 ;
摘要
Purpose: Manganese(II) is employed as a contrast agent with magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) for study of neuronal activation in rats and mice. However, at the concentrations required for MRI, Mn may induce pharmacological or toxic effects. Positron emission tomography (PET) imaging of (MnCl2)-Mn-52 at tracer doses has the potential to allow similar Mn studies as manganese-enhanced MRI while providing quantitative results and avoiding toxic effects. In this work, (MnCl2)-Mn-52 is produced and characterized as a PET tracer in phantoms and in rats. Methods: (MnCl2)-Mn-52 was produced by proton irradiation of natural Cr foil and separated by column chromatography. Images were acquired on a Siemens Focus 120 small animal PET scanner. Phantom images were acquired to assess uniformity, resolution, cascade background correction, and count rate linearity. Images of rats were also acquired after systemic and intracerebroventricular (ICV) administration of (MnCl2)-Mn-52 to investigate Mn(II) distribution in vivo. Results: Irradiation yield was 74.6 +/- 8.5 kBq/mu A min Mn-52 at end of bombardment with initial specific activity of at least 3.5 MBq/nmol. Mn-52 PET images show similar uniformity and resolution to F-18. F-18 based detector efficiency normalization is adequate for Mn-52 imaging. Subtraction of a rescaled random events distribution from sinogram data is effective for cascade correction of Mn-52 PET data. After systemic injection, Mn-52 appears in structures throughout the body of rats, including bones, liver, intestines, and the pituitary gland, but does not appear detectably throughout the brain. After ICY injection, Mn-52 remains in the brain and spinal cord. Conclusions: Mn-52 is a promising tracer for small animal PET imaging, yielding image quality comparable to F-18. Potential applications include studies similar to Mn-enhanced neuronal MRI, and in other organ systems including bones, spinal cord, and the digestive tract. (C) 2013 American Association of Physicists in Medicine. [http://dx.doi.org/10.1118/1.4793756]
引用
收藏
页数:8
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] Development of the First Potential Nonpeptidic Positron Emission Tomography Tracer for the Imaging of CCR2 Receptors
    Wagner, Stefan
    Gatti, Fernando de Moura
    Silva, Daniel G.
    Zacarias, Natalia V. Ortiz
    Zweemer, Annelien J. M.
    Hermann, Sven
    De Maria, Monica
    Koch, Michael
    Weiss, Christina
    Schepmann, Dirk
    Heitman, Laura H.
    Tschammer, Nuska
    Kopka, Klaus
    Junker, Anna
    CHEMMEDCHEM, 2021, 16 (04) : 640 - 645
  • [42] Development of a blood sample detector for multi-tracer positron emission tomography using gamma spectroscopy
    Velasco, Carlos
    Mota-Cobian, Adriana
    Mateo, Jesus
    Espana, Samuel
    EJNMMI PHYSICS, 2019, 6 (01)
  • [43] Ultrafast Photoclick Reaction for Selective 18F-Positron Emission Tomography Tracer Synthesis in Flow
    Fu, Youxin
    Helbert, Hugo
    Simeth, Nadja A.
    Crespi, Stefano
    Spoelstra, Gerbren B.
    van Dijl, Jan Maarten
    van Oosten, Marleen
    Nazario, Luiza Reali
    van der Born, Dion
    Luurtsema, Gert
    Szymanski, Wiktor
    Elsinga, Philip H.
    Feringa, Ben L.
    JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY, 2021, 143 (27) : 10041 - 10047
  • [44] Positron Emission Tomography-Guided Biopsy With a Dedicated Breast Scanner: Initial Evaluation
    Raylman, Raymond R.
    IEEE TRANSACTIONS ON NUCLEAR SCIENCE, 2009, 56 (03) : 620 - 624
  • [45] Longitudinal progression of sporadic Parkinson's disease: a multi-tracer positron emission tomography study
    Nandhagopal, R.
    Kuramoto, L.
    Schulzer, M.
    Mak, E.
    Cragg, J.
    Lee, Chong S.
    McKenzie, J.
    McCormick, S.
    Samii, A.
    Troiano, A.
    Ruth, T. J.
    Sossi, V.
    de la Fuente-Fernandez, R.
    Calne, Donald B.
    Stoessl, A. J.
    BRAIN, 2009, 132 : 2970 - 2979
  • [46] In vivo quantification of the [11C]DASB binding in the normal canine brain using positron emission tomography
    Olivia Taylor
    Nick Van Laeken
    Filip De Vos
    Ingeborgh Polis
    Tim Bosmans
    Ingeborg Goethals
    Rik Achten
    Andre Dobbeleir
    Eva Vandermeulen
    Chris Baeken
    Jimmy Saunders
    Kathelijne Peremans
    BMC Veterinary Research, 11
  • [47] In vivo quantification of the [11C]DASB binding in the normal canine brain using positron emission tomography
    Taylor, Olivia
    Van Laeken, Nick
    De Vos, Filip
    Polis, Ingeborgh
    Bosmans, Tim
    Goethals, Ingeborg
    Achten, Rik
    Dobbeleir, Andre
    Vandermeulen, Eva
    Baeken, Chris
    Saunders, Jimmy
    Peremans, Kathelijne
    BMC VETERINARY RESEARCH, 2015, 11
  • [48] Imaging Autotaxin In Vivo with 18F-Labeled Positron Emission Tomography Ligands
    Deng, Xiaoyun
    Salgado-Polo, Fernando
    Shao, Tuo
    Xiao, Zhiwei
    Van, Richard
    Chen, Jiahui
    Rong, Jian
    Haider, Ahmed
    Shao, Yihan
    Josephson, Lee
    Perrakis, Anastassis
    Liang, Steven H.
    JOURNAL OF MEDICINAL CHEMISTRY, 2021, 64 (20) : 15053 - 15068
  • [49] In Vivo Binding of Protoporphyrin IX to Rat Translocator Protein Imaged With Positron Emission Tomography
    Ozaki, Harushige
    Zoghbi, Sami S.
    Hong, Jinsoo
    Verma, Ajay
    Pike, Victor W.
    Innis, Robert B.
    Fujita, Masahiro
    SYNAPSE, 2010, 64 (08) : 649 - 653
  • [50] In Vivo Imaging of Liposomal Small Interfering RNA (siRNA) Trafficking by Positron Emission Tomography
    Ando, Hidenori
    Yonenaga, Norihito
    Asai, Tomohiro
    Hatanaka, Kentaro
    Koide, Hiroyuki
    Tsuzuku, Takuma
    Harada, Norihiro
    Tsukada, Hideo
    Oku, Naoto
    YAKUGAKU ZASSHI-JOURNAL OF THE PHARMACEUTICAL SOCIETY OF JAPAN, 2012, 132 (12): : 1373 - 1381