1 research outputs found
A Low-Cost, Tabletop LOD-EPR System for Nondestructive Quantification of Iron Oxide Nanoparticles in Tissues
Iron
oxide nanoparticles (IONPs) have wide utility in applications
from drug delivery to the rewarming of cryopreserved tissues. Due
to the complex behavior of IONPs (e.g., uneven particle distribution
and aggregation), further developments and clinical translation can
be accelerated by having access to a noninvasive method for tissue
IONP quantification. Currently, there is no low-cost method to nondestructively
track IONPs in tissues across a wide range of concentrations. This
work describes the performance of a low-cost, tabletop, longitudinally
detected electron paramagnetic resonance (LOD-EPR) system to address
this issue in the field of cryopreservation, which utilizes IONPs
for rewarming of rat kidneys. A low-cost LOD-EPR system is realized
via simultaneous transmit and receive using MHz continuous-wave transverse
excitation with kHz modulation, which is longitudinally detected at
the modulation frequency to provide both geometric and frequency isolation.
The accuracy of LOD-EPR for IONP quantification is compared with NMR
relaxometry. Solution measurements show excellent linearity (R2 > 0.99) versus Fe concentration for both
measurements
on EMG308 (a commercial nanoparticle), silica-coated EMG308, and PEG-coated
EMG308 in water. The LOD-EPR signal intensity and NMR longitudinal
relaxation rate constant (R1) of water
are affected by particle coating, solution viscosity, and particle
aggregation. R1 remains linear but with
a reduced slope when in cryoprotective agent (CPA) solution, whereas
the LOD-EPR signal is relatively insensitive to this. R1 does not correlate well with Fe concentration in rat
kidney sections (R2 = 0.3487), while LOD-EPR
does (R2 = 0.8276), with a linear regression
closely matching that observed in solution and CPA
