Introduction:Recently, nanobubbles (NBs) have gained significant traction in the field of tumor diagnosis and treatment owing to their distinctive advantages. However, the application of NBs is limited due to their restricted size and singular reflection section, resulting in low ultrasonic reflection. Methods: We synthesized a nano-scale ultrasound contrast agent (IR783-SiO 2 NPs@NB) by encapsulating SiO 2 nanoparticles in an IR783-labeled lipid shell using an improved film hydration method. We characterized its physicochemical properties, examined its microscopic morphology, evaluated its stability and cytotoxicity, and assessed its contrast-enhanced ultrasound imaging capability both in vitro and in vivo.
Results:The results show that IR783-SiO 2 NPs@NB had a "donut-type" composite microstructure, exhibited uniform particle size distribution (637.2 ± 86.4 nm), demonstrated excellent stability (30 min), high biocompatibility, remarkable tumor specific binding efficiency (99.78%), and an exceptional contrast-enhanced ultrasound imaging capability. Conclusion: Our newly developed multiple scattering NBs with tumor targeting capacity have excellent contrast-enhanced imaging capability, and they show relatively long contrast enhancement duration in solid tumors, thus providing a new approach to the structural design of NBs.