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Comparative study of the physicochemical properties of six clinical low molecular weight gadolinium contrast agents
Author(s) -
Laurent Sophie,
Elst Luce Vander,
Muller Robert N.
Publication year - 2006
Publication title -
contrast media & molecular imaging
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.714
H-Index - 50
eISSN - 1555-4317
pISSN - 1555-4309
DOI - 10.1002/cmmi.100
Subject(s) - transmetalation , relaxometry , chemistry , gadolinium , nuclear magnetic resonance , catalysis , organic chemistry , magnetic resonance imaging , medicine , physics , spin echo , radiology
Abstract This paper compares the physicochemical properties of six low molecular weight clinical complexes of gadolinium studied under identical experimental conditions. Magnevist®, Dotarem®, Omniscan®, ProHance®, MultiHance® and Gadovist® were investigated by oxygen‐17 relaxometry at different temperatures and by proton relaxometry at various magnetic fields, temperatures and media [pure water, zinc(II)‐containing aqueous solutions and HSA‐containing solutions]. Osmolality, viscosity and stability versus transmetallation by zinc(II) ions were added for a more comprehensive description. The relaxivities of the clinical formulations as measured in water are similar in the imaging magnetic field region, with a slightly better performance for MultiHance. This can be explained by a shorter distance between the hydrogen nuclei of the water molecule bound to the Gd 3+ ion and this paramagnetic centre. In contrast to the open‐chain complexes, all macrocyclic systems (Dotarem, ProHance and Gadovist) are insensitive to transmetallation by zinc ions. The stability of the open‐chain complexes with respect to transmetallation depends on the chemical structure of the ligand, with a better stability for MultiHance. The presence of human serum albumin has no significant effect on the proton relaxivity of Magnevist, Dotarem, Omniscan, ProHance and Gadovist but markedly increases the relaxivity of MultiHance because of a non‐covalent interaction with the protein. As a result, the relaxivity of MultiHance in HSA‐containing media of fixed concentration decreases with increasing concentration of the contrast agent. Copyright © 2006 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.

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