Identifying < i > in vivo < /i > inflammation using magnetic nanoparticle spectra.

Identifying <i>in vivo</i> inflammation using magnetic nanoparticle spectra. Phys Med Biol. 2020 Apr 20;: Authors: Weaver J, Ness D, Fields J, Jyoti D, Gordon-Wylie S, Berwin BL, Mirza S, Fiering S Abstract We are developing magnetic nanoparticle (NP) methods to characterize inflammation and infection in vivo. Peritoneal infection in C57BL/6 mice was used as a biological model. An intraperitoneal NP injection was followed by measurement of magnetic nanoparticle spectroscopy of Brownian rotation (MSB) spectra taken over time. MSB measures the magnetization of NPs in a low frequency alternating magnetic field. Two groups of three mice were studied; each group had two infected mice and one control with no infection. The raw MSB signal was compared with two derived metrics: the NP relaxation time and number of NPs present in the sensitive volume of the receive coil. A four compartment dynamic model was used to relate those physical properties to the relevant biological processes including phagocytic activity and migration. The relaxation time increased over time for all of the mice as the NPs were absorbed. The NP number decreased over time as the NPs were cleared from the sensitive volume of the receive coil. The composite p-values for all three rate constants were significant: raw signal, 0.0002, relaxation, <10-16 and local NP clearance, <10-16. However, not all the individual mice had significant changes: Only half ...
Source: Physics in Medicine and Biology - Category: Physics Authors: Tags: Phys Med Biol Source Type: research