Researchers Develop Groundbreaking New Graphene-Based MRI Contrast Agent

A team of researchers at Stony Brook University has developed a new, highly efficacious, potentially safer and more cost effective nanoparticle-based MRI contrast agent for improved disease diagnosis and detection.

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Potentially safer and more cost effective agent could replace current FDA-restricted gadolinium

STONY BROOK, NY, June 6, 2012 – Dr. Balaji Sitharaman, Ph.D., an Assistant Professor in the Department of Biomedical Engineering at Stony Brook University, and a team of researchers developed a new, highly efficacious, potentially safer and more cost effective nanoparticle-based MRI (magnetic resonance imaging) contrast agent for improved disease diagnosis and detection. The most recent findings are discussed in detail in his team’s research paper “Physicochemical characterization, and relaxometry studies of micro-graphite oxide, graphene nanoplatelets, and nanoribbons,” published in the June 7 edition of the journal PLoS ONE.

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