Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
1877818 Applied Radiation and Isotopes 2011 4 Pages PDF
Abstract

This study aims to prepare 99mTechnetium Pheophorbide-a (99mTc-PH-A) complex and evaluate its efficiency as an infection imaging agent. First, PH-A was obtained from Spirulina maxima algae, and the product compound was confirmed using 1H NMR and MS (ESI) methods. The PH-A was then labeled with 99mTc using the tin chloride method and its biological efficacy as a potential radiotracer for Staphylococcus aureus (S. aureus) infection was evaluated in bacterially infected and sterile inflamed rats. The radiochemical stability of the 99mTc-PH-A in human serum was determined by thin-layer radiochromatography (TLRC). The radiochemical purity was 87±3.2% and remained constant at more than 80±0.1% even in serum for 120 min after radiolabeling.These experiments indicated that the ratio of 99mTc-PH-A uptake in bacterially infected muscle, as compared to normal muscle, [target/non-target (T/NT)=5.6 at 1 h] was over four times higher than that in sterile inflamed muscle (T/NT=1.29 at 1 h). Disappearance of activity from the kidney and liver indicated that the urinary and hepatobiliary systems were the normal routes of excretion of the complex.99mTechnetium Pheophorbide prepared with high yield is able to localize well in the bacterially infected muscle of the rats and 99mTc-PH-A may be developed as a radiopharmaceutical agent to distinguish infection from inflammation by nuclear imaging.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Physics and Astronomy Radiation
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