Indication |
Gadobenate Dimeglumine is an MRI contrast agent used primarily for
MR imaging of the liver. It can also be used for MRI of the heart, as
well as and central nervous system in adults to visualize lesions with
abnormal brain vascularity or abnormalities in the blood brain barrier,
the brain, spine, or other associated tissues. |
Pharmacodynamics |
Gadobenate dimeglumine shares the pharmacokinetic properties of
the ECF contrast agent gadopentetate dimeglumine; however, gadobenate
differs in that is also selectively taken-up by hepatocytes and excreted
via the bile (up to 5% of dose). The elimination half-life of
gadobenate dimeglumine is approximately 1 hour. It is not metabolized. |
Mechanism of action |
Based on the behavior of protons when placed in a strong magnetic
field, which is interpreted and transformed into images by magnetic
resonance (MR) instruments. Paramagnetic agents have unpaired electrons
that generate a magnetic field about 700 times larger than the proton's
field, thus disturbing the proton's local magnetic field. When the local
magnetic field around a proton is disturbed, its relaxation process is
altered. MR images are based on proton density and proton relaxation
dynamics. MR instruments can record 2 different relaxation processes,
the T1 (spin-lattice or longitudinal relaxation time) and the T2
(spin-spin or transverse relaxation time). In magnetic resonance imaging
(MRI), visualization of normal and pathological brain tissue depends in
part on variations in the radiofrequency signal intensity that occur
with changes in proton density, alteration of the T1, and variation in
the T2. When placed in a magnetic field, Gadobenate Dimeglumine shortens
both the T1 and the T2 relaxation times in tissues where it
accumulates. At clinical doses, Gadobenate Dimeglumine primarily affects
the T1 relaxation time, thus producing an increase in signal intensity.
Gadobenate Dimeglumine does not cross the intact blood-brain barrier;
therefore, it does not accumulate in normal brain tissue or in central
nervous system (CNS) lesions that have not caused an abnormal
blood-brain barrier (e.g., cysts, mature post-operative scars). |
Absorption |
Not Available |
Volume of distribution |
Not Available |
Protein binding |
Plasma protein binding is low, weak, and transient. |
Metabolism |
Not metabolized. |
Route of elimination |
Gadobenate ion is eliminated predominately via the kidneys, with 78% to 96% of an administered dose recovered in the urine. |
Half life |
1 hour |
Clearance |
- 0.093 +/- 0.010 L/hr/kg [healthy male subjects receiving 3 single-dose IV administration with doses from 0.005-0.4 mmol/kg]
|
Toxicity |
Gadolinium-based radiocontrast agents like gadobenate dimeglumine
are cytotoxic to renal cells. The toxic effects include apoptosis,
cellular energy failure, disruption of calcium homeostasis, and
disturbance of tubular cell polarity, and are thought to be linked to
oxidative stress. |
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