Abstract
Magnetic resonance imaging contrast agents are currently designed by modifying their structural and physiochemical properties to improve relaxivity and to enhance image contrast. Here, we show a general method for increasing relaxivity by confining contrast agents inside the nanoporous structure of silicon particles. Magnevist, gadofullerenes and gadonanotubes were loaded inside the pores of quasi-hemispherical and discoidal particles. For all combinations of nanoconstructs, a boost in longitudinal proton relaxivity r(1) was observed: Magnevist, r(1) ≈ 14 mM(-1) s(-1)/Gd(3+) ion (∼ 8.15 × 10(+7) mM(-1) s(-1)/construct); gadofullerenes, r(1) ≈ 200 mM(-1) s(-1)/Gd(3+) ion (∼ 7 × 10(+9) mM(-1) s(-1)/construct); gadonanotubes, r(1) ≈ 150 mM(-1) s(-1)/Gd(3+) ion (∼ 2 × 10(+9) mM(-1) s(-1)/construct). These relaxivity values are about 4 to 50 times larger than those of clinically available gadolinium-based agents (∼ 4 mM(-1) s(-1)/Gd(3+) ion). The enhancement in contrast is attributed to the geometrical confinement of the agents, which influences the paramagnetic behaviour of the Gd(3+) ions. Thus, nanoscale confinement offers a new and general strategy for enhancing the contrast of gadolinium-based contrast agents.