Gd-BOPTA/Dimeg: Experimental disease imaging

Abstract
The novel tissue-specific contrast agent, Gd-BOPTA/Dirmeg, was tested in MR imaging of experimental focal liver disease and of acute myocardial ischemia in rats. Directly implanted liver tumors and blood-borne metastases were used as models for focal liver disease and occlusion of the lower anterior descending coronary artery as model for acute ischemia. The studies with implanted tumors, at a dose level of 250 μmol/kg, showed a very high (370%) and persistent (>2h) increase in the tumor-liver contrast-to-noise ratio (CNR), owing to selective enhancement of normal liver parenchyma signal intensity. While all blood-borne metastases showed a similar late CNR enhancement, some of them experienced early contrast loss due to transient signal intensity enhancement. In myocardial imaging. Gd-BOPTA/Dimeg produced a signal intensity enhancement in normal myocardium and an injured area-normal area CNR enhancement which were both much stronger and more presistent than those produced by Gd-DTPA/Dimeg. © 1991 Academic Press, Inc.

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