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Pharmacokinetics of Gadomer-17, a new dendritic magnetic resonance contrast agent

✍ Scribed by Misselwitz, B


Book ID
104390779
Publisher
Springer
Year
2001
Tongue
English
Weight
143 KB
Volume
12
Category
Article
ISSN
0968-5243

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✦ Synopsis


Rationale and objecti6es: Gadomer-17 is a new magnetic resonance (MR) contrast medium presently in clinical development. It is a dendritic gadolinium (Gd) chelate carrying 24 Gd ions. This study investigated the pharmacokinetic behavior of this contrast medium. Methods: The pharmacokinetics of Gadomer-17 were investigated in different species (rat, rabbit, dog, monkey) for up to 7 days after intravenous (i.v.) injection of 25-100 mmol/kg body weight. In addition, elimination and biodistribution were evaluated after single i.v. injection of Gadomer-17 in rats. Results: After i.v. injection Gadomer-17 distributes almost exclusively within the intravascular space without significant diffusion into the interstitial space. The volume of distribution (Vc) in the initial or a-phase ranged from 0.04 l/kg (rats, rabbits) to 0.06 l/kg (monkeys) and 0.07 l/kg (dogs), which reflects mainly the plasma volume. The blood/plasma concentration profile was found to be biphasic. The volume of distribution at a steady state is clearly smaller than that of other contrast media, which distribute to the extracellular space. After single i.v. injection in rats, the dendritic contrast medium was rapidly and completely eliminated from the body, mainly via glomerular filtration. No long-term accumulation or retention of the nonmetabolized agent was detectable in organs or tissues. Conclusions: Gadomer-17 is a promising new MR contrast medium that has an intravascular distribution and a rapid renal elimination.


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## Abstract ## Purpose To evaluate the combined use of carbon dioxide (CO~2~) and a gadolinium‐based blood‐pool agent for magnetic resonance angiography (MRA). ## Materials and Methods After an initial intravenous injection of the blood‐pool agent Gadomer (Schering AG, Germany), repeated transca