Fluorescence Imaging and Whole-Body Biodistribution of Near-Infrared-Emitting Quantum Dots after Subcutaneous Injection for Regional Lymph Node Mapping in Mice. - Archive ouverte HAL Accéder directement au contenu
Article Dans Une Revue Molecular Imaging and Biology Année : 2009

Fluorescence Imaging and Whole-Body Biodistribution of Near-Infrared-Emitting Quantum Dots after Subcutaneous Injection for Regional Lymph Node Mapping in Mice.

Résumé

PURPOSE: This study compares fluorescence imaging to mass spectroscopy (inductively coupled plasma-mass spectroscopy, ICP-MS) for detection of quantum dots (QDs) in sentinel lymph node (LN) mapping of breast cancer. PROCEDURES: We study the accumulation of near-infrared-emitting QDs into regional LNs and their whole-body biodistribution in mice after subcutaneous injection, using in vivo fluorescence imaging and ex vivo elemental analysis by ICP-MS. RESULTS: We show that the QD accumulation in regional LNs is detectable by fluorescence imaging as early as 5 min post-delivery. Their concentration reaches a maximum at 4 h then decreases over a 10-day observation period. These data are confirmed by ICP-MS. The QD uptake in other organs, assessed by ICP-MS, increases steadily over time; however, its overall level remains rather low. CONCLUSIONS: Fluorescence imaging can be used as a non-invasive alternative to ICP-MS to follow the QD accumulation kinetics into regional LNs

Dates et versions

hal-00437294 , version 1 (30-11-2009)

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Citer

Emilie Pic, Thomas Pons, Lina Bezdetnaya, Agnès Leroux, François Guillemin, et al.. Fluorescence Imaging and Whole-Body Biodistribution of Near-Infrared-Emitting Quantum Dots after Subcutaneous Injection for Regional Lymph Node Mapping in Mice.. Molecular Imaging and Biology, 2009, 12 (4), pp.394-405. ⟨10.1007/s11307-009-0288-y⟩. ⟨hal-00437294⟩
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