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Title: Particulate suspensions as ultrasonic contrast agents for liver and spleen. Author: Violante MR, Parker KJ, Fischer HW. Journal: Invest Radiol; 1988 Sep; 23 Suppl 1():S294-7. PubMed ID: 3058633. Abstract: Ultrasonic backscatter and attenuation coefficients of a medium can be increased by the addition of solid, micron-size inhomogeneities. A potentially useful agent for ultrasonic contrast of liver images has been identified. Iodipamide ethyl ester (IDE) particles can be produced in the form of dense, relatively incompressible solids with high impedance mismatch to water. The chemical, biochemical, and pharmacologic properties of the small, uniform diameter IDE particles permit safe intravenous injection followed by rapid accumulation of reticuloendothelial (RE) cells of the liver and spleen, and later elimination from these organs. Since the particles are phagocytized by RE cells, present in normal liver but not in tumors and many lesions, the selective enhancement of ultrasonic backscatter should improve detectability of lesions that are hypoechoic or isoechoic compared with surrounding tissue. The mechanisms of particle-ultrasound interaction may be described by relative motion attenuation, and scattering from a cloud of dense, incompressible spheres for the case of IDE particles in agar. Thus, values of attenuation and backscatter can be controlled by choice of ultrasound frequency and particle concentration and size. When the particles are accumulated in rat and rabbit livers, additional mechanisms induce attenuation and backscatter in excess of that predicted by IDE in agar. This preliminary work demonstrates that solid, biocompatible particles may be useful as an ultrasonic contrast agent.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]