In vivo NMR in pharmaceutical research. |
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Authors: | M Rudin A Sauter |
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Affiliation: | Preclinical Research, Sandoz Pharma Ltd., Basel, Switzerland. |
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Abstract: | In vivo NMR techniques are currently well established in pharmaceutical research and will likely become increasingly important in the future, as they procure noninvasively morphological, physiological, and biochemical information. The status of magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and spectroscopy (MRS) in drug development is discussed on the basis of the characterization and evaluation of a rat model of ischemic stroke and the development and profiling of drugs for cerebral ischemia in this model. It can be concluded that MRI is well suited for drug screening (quantitative determination of lesion size), while dynamic MRI and MRS techniques provide relevant information on the mechanism of drug actions. The possibility to follow changes, pathological and therapeutic, in the same individual is important from two points of view. First, variations due to interindividual differences may be eliminated, increasing the statistical power of the results. Second, dose and/or time dependence of a drug can be explored in the same individual. As a result, the number of animals required for a study will be reduced, which from both ethical and economic aspects is highly desirable. |
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