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Revista Portuguesa de Pneumologia

Print version ISSN 0873-2159

Abstract

BOTELHO, Maria Filomena Rabaça Roque et al. Nanoradioliposomes molecularly modulated to study the lung deep lymphatic drainage. Rev Port Pneumol [online]. 2009, vol.15, n.2, pp.261-293. ISSN 0873-2159.

Lung deep lymphatic drainage (LDLD) plays an important role in the removal of foreign materials from lungs being alveolar macrophages the first line of phagocytic defence with high affinity for pathogenic microorganisms. Bacillus subtilis is a well-known genome-decoded saprophyte of the human respiratory tract used in research and in the biotechnology industry. Lung deep lymphatic chains (LDLC) constitute one of the first sites of lung tumours’ dissemination. In this work we intended to develop and validate a non-invasive method for assessing LDLC by nanoradioliposomes aerosolised modulated on the Bacillus subtilis spore wall. The final goal was to produce a nanoradioliposome formulation that can mimics the dynamics of preferential removal of spores by LDLD and present the ideal properties as a tracer for molecular imaging studies. Seven different liposomal formulations were tested, and the formulation-F demonstrated physicochemical and radiopharmaceutical properties that make it an ideal candidate as an in vivo probe for molecular imaging studies of the LDLC. Nanoradioliposomes of the formulation-F after labelling with 99mTc-HMPAO were administered as aerosols to 20 Sus scrofa. Hilar and interpulmonary communications were visualized in first 5 minutes post-inhalation, infradiaphragmatic chains between 10 and 20 minutes, the ganglia of the aortic chain at 20 minutes and those of the renal hilar region at 30 minutes. Conclusion: the proposed method enables visualization of deep lymphatic lung network and lymph nodes. Besides, this technique involving the modulation of nanoradioliposomes targeting specific organs or tissues may be an important tool for diagnostic or even for therapeutic purposes.

Keywords : Nanoradioliposomes; molecular modulation; lung lymphatic drainage; functional nuclear imaging.

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