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Searchterm 'Ultrasound Contrast Agents' found in 54 articles
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SONUS Pharmaceuticals
SONUS Pharmaceuticals, Inc., is engaged in the research and development of ultrasound contrast agents (USCA) and drug delivery systems for use in the diagnosis and treatment of heart disease, cancer and other conditions.
Sonus Pharmaceuticals and OncoGenex Technologies Inc., a privately held biopharmaceutical development company, announced 2008 the signing of a definitive agreement to merge the two companies. The combined company will operate as OncoGenex Pharmaceuticals, Inc.

Ultrasound Contrast Agents:

Third Generation USCA
The third generation ultrasound contrast agents (UCA/USCA) are more echogenic and stable, and are able to enhance the echogenicity of parenchyma on B-mode images. These microbubbles may thus show perfusion, even in such a difficult region as the myocardium.

See also History of Ultrasound Contrast Agents.
Tissue-Specific Ultrasound Contrast Agent
Tissue-specific ultrasound contrast agents improve the image contrast resolution through differential uptake. The concentration of microbubble contrast agents within the vasculature, reticulo-endothelial, or lymphatic systems produces an effective passive targeting of these areas. Other contrast media concepts include targeted drug delivery via contrast microbubbles.
Tissue-specific ultrasound contrast agents are injected intravenously and taken up by specific tissues or they adhere to specific targets such as venous thrombosis. These effects may require minutes to several hours to reach maximum effectiveness. By enhancing the acoustic differences between normal and diseased tissues, these tissue-specific agents improve the detectability of abnormalities.
Some microbubbles accumulate in normal hepatic tissue; some are phagocytosed by Kupffer cells in the reticuloendothelial system and others may stay in the sinusoids. Liver tumors without normal Kupffer cells can be identified by the lack of the typical mosaic color pattern of the induced acoustic emission. The hepatic parenchymal phase, which may last from less than an hour to several days, depending on the specific contrast medium used, may be imaged by bubble-specific modes such as stimulated acoustic emission (color Doppler using high MI) or pulse inversion imaging.
Alliance Pharmaceutical Corp.
www.allp.htm California-based research and development company. Alliance Pharmaceutical Corporation. The principal activities of the Company is identifying, designing, and developing novel medical products. The Company is engaged in development of scientific discoveries into medical products and licensing these products to multinational pharmaceutical companies in exchange for fixed payments and royalty or profit sharing payments. The Company has developed three innovative products through initial clinical (human) trials. The products are Oxygent™, Liquivent and Imavist™. The Company's strategy is to identify potential new medical products though its own efforts and scientific collaborations with researchers and clinicians in universities and medical centers. In Dec 2000 the company acquired Molecular Biosystems Inc a developer of intravenous ultrasound contrast agent for the heart.

'September 20, 2001 Alliance Pharmaceutical Corp. announced that it has won a favorable Final Judgment from the United States Patent and Trademark Office's Board of Patent Appeals and Interferences regarding claims in U.S. Patent No. 5,558,854, which is owned by Nycomed Imaging, AS. The Final Judgment determined that claims made in the Nycomed patent with respect to 'microbubbles' that contain perfluorohexane filling gas are invalid and are therefore unpatentable.'
June 04, 2010, the company announced in their quartzerly report: 'We no longer have working capital to fund our operations. Because adequate funds have not been available to us in the past, we have already delayed our Oxygent development efforts and have eliminated our other product development programs.'


Ultrasound Contrast Agents:
BiSphere™
[This entry is marked for removal.]

From POINT Biomedical Corp
BiSphere™ is a technology for drug delivery applications by ultrasound. BiSpheres™ consists of microparticles comprising a shell of an outer layer of a biologically compatible material and an inner layer of biodegradable polymer. The core of the microbubbles contains a filling gas, liquid, or solid for use in drug delivery or as a contrast agent for ultrasonic contrast imaging. The contrast agent particles are capable of passing through the capillary systems of a subject. The drug-loaded biSpheres™ would be administered intravenously and freely circulate throughout the body, while the drug encapsulated within would remain biologically unavailable. The drug would only be released when the biSpheres become flooded when passing through an externally directed ultrasound field.
The use of biSpheres™ to transport agents to specific sites within the body is expected to substantially increase local efficacy while decreasing systemic side effects or adverse reactions. The biSpheres™ may also serve to protect labile agents from metabolism or degradation. The noninvasive release of a protected, encapsulated agent can be controlled by ultrasound imaging to a depth of 20-30 cm from the skin surface.
The flexibility in size control in the biSphere™ technology has enabled the construction of submicron ultrasound contrast agents suitable for lymphatic imaging, with a diameter in the submicron range. This agent, while much smaller in size than CardioSphere®, is based on the BiSphere configuration: a shell within a shell enclosing a gas. The inner layer, made from a biodegradable polymer, provides the physical structure and controls the acoustic response. The outer layer functions as the biological interface. Each of these layers has been independently tailored to fulfill the specific requirements for lymphatic imaging.
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