Actinide
Actinium
Alkali metal
Alkaline earth metal
Alloy
Alpha decay
Aluminium
Americium
Ammonium oxalate
Antimony
Argon
Arsenic
Astatine
Atomic mass
Atomic number
Atomic radius
Atomic weight
Barium
Barn (unit)
Base (chemistry)
Bastnäsite
Berkelium
Beryllium
Beta decay
Bismuth
Body-centered cubic
Bohrium
Boiling point
Boron
Bromine
Bubble memory
Bulk modulus
Burnable poison#Burnable poisons
CANDU reactor
CAS registry number
Cadmium
Caesium
Calcium
Californium
Carbon
Carbon nanotubes
Carl Gustaf Mosander
Celsius
Cerium
Chelation
Chemical element
Chemist
Chlorine
Chromium
Cobalt
Coefficient of thermal expansion
Collective names of groups of like elements
Compact disc
Complex (chemistry)
Computed tomography
Coordination complex
Coordination number
Copernicium
Copper
Covalent radius
Crystal structure
Curie temperature
Curium
DOTA (chelate)
Darmstadtium
Decay energy
Decay mode
Decay product
Density
Dentate
Dialysis
Didymium
Digital object identifier
Doping (semiconductors)
Double beta minus decay
Dubnium
Ductile
Dysprosium
Einsteinium
Electrical resistivity and conductivity
Electron
Electron capture
Electron configuration
Electron shell
Electronegativity
Electronvolt
Enthalpy of fusion
Enthalpy of vaporization
Erbium
Europium
F-block
Fahrenheit
Fermium
Ferromagnetic
Ferromagnetism
Finland
Fluorine
Food and Drug Administration (United States)
France
Francium
Actinium
Alkali metal
Alkaline earth metal
Alloy
Alpha decay
Aluminium
Americium
Ammonium oxalate
Antimony
Argon
Arsenic
Astatine
Atomic mass
Atomic number
Atomic radius
Atomic weight
Barium
Barn (unit)
Base (chemistry)
Bastnäsite
Berkelium
Beryllium
Beta decay
Bismuth
Body-centered cubic
Bohrium
Boiling point
Boron
Bromine
Bubble memory
Bulk modulus
Burnable poison#Burnable poisons
CANDU reactor
CAS registry number
Cadmium
Caesium
Calcium
Californium
Carbon
Carbon nanotubes
Carl Gustaf Mosander
Celsius
Cerium
Chelation
Chemical element
Chemist
Chlorine
Chromium
Cobalt
Coefficient of thermal expansion
Collective names of groups of like elements
Compact disc
Complex (chemistry)
Computed tomography
Coordination complex
Coordination number
Copernicium
Copper
Covalent radius
Crystal structure
Curie temperature
Curium
DOTA (chelate)
Darmstadtium
Decay energy
Decay mode
Decay product
Density
Dentate
Dialysis
Didymium
Digital object identifier
Doping (semiconductors)
Double beta minus decay
Dubnium
Ductile
Dysprosium
Einsteinium
Electrical resistivity and conductivity
Electron
Electron capture
Electron configuration
Electron shell
Electronegativity
Electronvolt
Enthalpy of fusion
Enthalpy of vaporization
Erbium
Europium
F-block
Fahrenheit
Fermium
Ferromagnetic
Ferromagnetism
Finland
Fluorine
Food and Drug Administration (United States)
France
Francium
europium ← gadolinium → terbium
-
↑
Gd
↓
Cm
64Gd
Periodic table
Appearance
silvery white
General properties
Name, symbol, number
gadolinium, Gd, 64
Pronunciation
/ˌɡædɵˈlɪniəm/
GAD-o-LIN-ee-əm
Element category
lanthanide
Group, period, block
n/a, 6, f
Standard atomic weight
157.25g·mol−1
Electron configuration
Xe 4f7 5d1 6s2
Electrons per shell
2, 8, 18, 25, 9, 2 (Image)
Physical properties
Phase
solid
Density (near r.t.)
7.90 g·cm−3
Liquid density at m.p.
7.4 g·cm−3
Melting point
1585 K, 1312 °C, 2394 °F
Boiling point
3546 K, 3273 °C, 5923 °F
Heat of fusion
10.05 kJ·mol−1
Heat of vaporization
301.3 kJ·mol−1
Specific heat capacity
(25 °C) 37.03 J·mol−1·K−1
Vapor pressure (calculated)
P (Pa)
1
10
100
1 k
10 k
100 k
at T (K)
1836
2028
2267
2573
2976
3535
Atomic properties
Oxidation states
1, 2, 3 (mildly basic oxide)
Electronegativity
1.20 (Pauling scale)
Ionization energies
1st: 593.4 kJ·mol−1
2nd: 1170 kJ·mol−1
3rd: 1990 kJ·mol−1
Atomic radius
180 pm
Covalent radius
196±6 pm
Miscellanea
Crystal structure
hexagonal
Magnetic ordering
ferromagnetic/paramagnetic
transition at 292 K1
Electrical resistivity
(r.t.) (α, poly) 1.310 µΩ·m
Thermal conductivity
(300 K) 10.6 W·m−1·K−1
Thermal expansion
(100 °C) (α, poly) 9.4 µm/(m·K)
Speed of sound (thin rod)
(20 °C) 2680 m/s
Young's modulus
(α form) 54.8 GPa
Shear modulus
(α form) 21.8 GPa
Bulk modulus
(α form) 37.9 GPa
Poisson ratio
(α form) 0.259
Vickers hardness
570 MPa
CAS registry number
7440-54-2
Most stable isotopes
Main article: Isotopes of gadolinium
iso
NA
half-life
DM
DE (MeV)
DP
152Gd
0.20%
1.08×1014 y
α
2.205
148Sm
154Gd
2.18%
154Gd is stable with 90 neutrons
155Gd
14.80%
155Gd is stable with 91 neutrons
156Gd
20.47%
156Gd is stable with 92 neutrons
157Gd
15.65%
157Gd is stable with 93 neutrons
158Gd
24.84%
158Gd is stable with 94 neutrons
160Gd
21.86%
>1.3×1021y
β−β−
1.7
160Dy
v · d · e
Requiem for a Panic Attack: More Large Studies Vindicate Gadolinium Contrast
Five years after the first reports linking gadolinium-based MRI contrast agents to nephrogenic system fibrosis (NSF), separate presentations of post-marketing data from manufacturers and an independent prospective study supported by agencies in France have validated the low-risk status of the contrast agent Dotarem (Gd-DOTA).
gadolinium: Definition from Answers.com
gadolinium n. ( Symbol Gd ) A silvery-white, malleable, ductile, metallic rare-earth element obtained from monazite and bastnaesite and used in
Gadolinium ( /ˌɡædɵˈlɪniəm/ GAD-o-LIN-ee-əm) is a chemical element with the symbol Gd and atomic number 64. It is a silvery-white, malleable and ductile rare-earth metal. Gadolinium has exceptionally high absorption of neutrons and therefore is used for shielding in neutron radiography and in nuclear reactors. Because of its paramagnetic properties, solutions of organic gadolinium complexes and gadolinium compounds are the most popular intravenous MRI contrast agents in medical magnetic resonance imaging.2
Contents
1 Characteristics
1.1 Physical properties
1.2 Chemical properties of elemental Gd
1.2.1 Chemical compounds
1.3 Isotopes
2 History
3 Occurrence
4 Production
5 Applications
6 Biological role
7 Safety
8 References
9 External links
Characteristics
A sample of gadolinium
Physical properties
Gadolinium is a silvery-white malleable and ductile rare-earth metal. It crystallizes in hexagonal, close-packed α- form at room temperature, but, when heated to temperatures above 1235 °C, it transforms into its β- form, which has a body-centered cubic structure.3
Gadolinium-157 has the highest thermal neutron capture cross-section among any stable nuclides: 259,000 barns. Only xenon-135 has a higher cross section, 2 million barns, but that isotope is unstable.4
Gadolinium is ferromagnetic at temperatures below 19 °C (66 °F)2 and is strongly paramagnetic above this temperature. Gadolinium demonstrates a magnetocaloric effect whereby its temperature increases when it enters a magnetic field and decreases when it leaves the magnetic field. The effect is considerably stronger for the gadolinium alloy Gd5(Si2Ge2).5
Individual gadolinium atoms have been isolated by encapsulating them into fullerene molecules and visualized with transmission electron microscope.6 Individual Gd atoms and small Gd clusters have also been incorporated into carbon nanotubes.7
Chemical properties of elemental Gd
See also: Category:Gadolinium compounds
Gadolinium combines with most elements to form Gd(III) derivatives. nitrogen, carbon, sulfur, phosphorus, boron, selenium, silicon and arsenic at elevated temperatures, forming binary compounds.8
International panel revises 'McDonald Criteria' for diagnosing multiple sclerosis
( National Multiple Sclerosis Society ) An international panel has revised and simplified the "McDonald Criteria" commonly used to diagnose MS, incorporating new data that should speed the diagnosis without compromising accuracy. The panel, organized and supported by the National MS Society and ECTRIMS, was chaired by Chris H. Polman, MD, PhD (Free University of Amsterdam).
Gadolinium Lawyer NSF Kidney / Renal NFD MRI Attorney Failure ...
Gadolinium side effects have been know to cause Nephrogenic Systemic Fibrosis (NSF) a disorder characterized by widespread tissue fibrosis. ...
Unlike other rare earth elements, metallic gadolinium is relatively stable in dry air. However, it tarnishes quickly in moist air, forming a loosely adhering gadolinium(III) oxide (Gd2O3), which spalls off, exposing more surface to oxidation.
4 Gd + 3 O2 → 2 Gd2O3
Gadolinium is a strong reducing agent, which reduces oxides of several metals into their elements. Gadolinium is quite electropositive and reacts slowly with cold water and quite quickly with hot water to form gadolinium hydroxide:
2 Gd + 6 H2O → 2 Gd(OH)3 + 3 H2
Gadolinium metal is attacked readily by dilute sulfuric acid to form solutions containing the colorless Gd(III) ions, which exist as a [Gd(OH2)93+ complexes:9
2 Gd + 3 H2SO4 + 18 H2O → 2 [Gd(H2O)93+ + 3 SO42- + 3 H2
Gadolinium metal reacts with the halogens (X2) at temperature about 200 °C:
2 Gd + 3 X2 → 2 GdX3
Chemical compounds
In the great majority of its compounds, Gd adopts the oxidation state +3. All four trihalides are known. All are white except for the iodide, which is yellow. Most commonly encountered of the halides is gadolinium(III) chloride (GdCl3). The oxide dissolves in acids to give the salts, such as gadolinium(III) nitrate.
Gadolinium(III), like most lanthanide ions, forms complexes with high coordination numbers. This tendency is illustrated by the use of DOTA chelating agent, an octadentate ligand. Salts of [Gd(DOTA)]- are useful in magnetic resonance imaging. A variety of related chelate complexes have been developed, including gadodiamide.
Reduced gadolinium compounds are known, especially in the solid state. Gadolinium(II) halides are obtained by heating Gd(III) halides in presence of metallic Gd in tantalum containers. Gadolinium also form sesquichloride Gd2Cl3, which can be further reduced to GdCl by annealing at 800 °C. This gadolinium(I) chloride forms platelets with layered graphite-like structure.10
Isotopes
Main article: Isotopes of gadolinium
Naturally occurring gadolinium is composed of 6 stable isotopes, 154Gd, 155Gd, 156Gd, 157Gd, 158Gd and 160Gd, and 1 radioisotope, 152Gd, with 158Gd being the most abundant (24.84% natural abundance). The predicted double beta decay of 160Gd has never been observed (the only lower limit on its half-life of more than 1.3×1021 years has been set experimentally 11).
Sustained disease-activity-free status in patients with relapsing-remitting multiple sclerosis treated with cladribine ...
On the basis of various clinical and MRI measurements, the phase 3 Cladribine Tablets Treating Multiple Sclerosis Orally (CLARITY) study in patients with relapsing—remitting multiple sclerosis (RRMS) showed that short-course oral treatment with cladribine at cumulative doses of 3·5 and 5·25 mg/kg over 96 weeks was more effective than placebo.
Metal Element GADOLINIUM Metal Element 99 9 1kg 99 9 industrial grade purity The metal is in chunk form Buyer will receive 1kg of Gd chunks with each an average of 60 120 grams Gadolinium is element No 64 on the periodic table of elements Gadolinium is a member of the Rare Earth elements And though many of the Rare Earths are in fact relatively abundant in
http://cgi.ebay.com/GADOLINIUM-Metal-Element-99-9-1kg-1000-grams-2-2lbs_W0QQitemZ120380452260QQcmdZViewItemQQptZLH_DefaultDomain_0?hash=item120380452260&_trksid=p4634.c0.m14
Gadolinium - New World Encyclopedia
Gadolinium (chemical symbol Gd, atomic number 64) is a silvery white metallic element and ... Gadolinium is an inner transition metal (or lanthanide) that lies in ...
Twenty-nine radioisotopes have been characterized, with the most stable being alpha-decaying 152Gd (naturally occurring) with a half-life of 1.08×1014 years, and 150Gd with a half-life of 1.79×106 years. All of the remaining radioactive isotopes have half-lives of less than 74.7 years. The majority of these have half-lives of less than 24.6 seconds. Gadolinium isotopes have 4 metastable isomers, with the most stable being 143mGd (T½=110 seconds), 145mGd (T½=85 seconds) and 141mGd (T½=24.5 seconds).
Isotopes with atomic masses lower than the most abundant stable isotope, 158Gd, primarily decay via electron capture to Eu (europium) isotopes. At higher atomic masses, the primary decay mode is beta decay, and the primary products are Tb (terbium) isotopes.
History
In 1880, Swiss chemist Jean Charles Galissard de Marignac observed spectroscopic lines due to gadolinium in samples of didymium and gadolinite; French chemist Paul Émile Lecoq de Boisbaudran separated gadolinia, the oxide of gadolinium, from Mosander's yttria in 1886. The element itself was isolated only recently. Gadolinium, like the mineral gadolinite, is named after Finnish chemist and geologist Johan Gadolin.3
Occurrence
Gadolinite
Gadolinium is a constituent in many minerals such as monazite and bastnäsite, which are oxides. The metal is too reactive to exist naturally. Ironically, the mineral gadolinite contains only traces of Gd. The abundance in the earth crust is about 6.2 mg/kg.3 The main mining areas are China, USA, Brazil, Sri Lanka, India and Australia with reserves expected to exceed one million tonnes. World production of pure gadolinium is about 400 tonnes per year.
Production
Gadolinium is produced both from monazite and bastnäsite.
Crushed minerals are extracted with hydrochloric or sulfuric acids, which converts the insoluble oxides into soluble chlorides or sulfates.
The acidic filtrates are partially neutralized with caustic soda to pH 3–4. Thorium precipitates as its hydroxide and is removed.
The remaining solution is treated with ammonium oxalate to convert rare earths in to their insoluble oxalates. The oxalates are converted to oxides by heating.
The oxides are dissolved in nitric acid that excludes one of the main components, cerium, whose oxide is insoluble in HNO3.
The solution is treated with magnesium nitrate to produce a crystallized mixture of double salts of gadolinium, samarium and europium.
The salts are separated by ion exchange chromatography.
The rare earth ions are then selectively washed out by suitable complexing agent.3
MRI Improvements Show Promise for Myocardial Infarction
Refinements in MRI technique continue to show promise in clarifying the nature and extent of damage of myocardial infarction. Take for example teams from Munich, Germany presenting this week at ECR 2011, who have been finding ways around the problem of adapting inversion time to the individual patient when using delayed enhancement to detect tissue damage.
Image 4 This image shows a typical HCM heart with septal hypertrophy and a normal left ventricular free wall Image 5 This image shows an HCM heart with apical hypertrophy Image 6 This image show an MRI image of an HCM heart prior to gadolinium short axes view Image 7 This is the same heart as image 6 after gadolinium has been given notice the areas of
http://www.4hcm.org/WCMS/index.php?screening
Gadolinium - MRI with Gadolinium - Your Legal Guide
Learn about gadolinium based contrast agents used in gadolinium MRIs. Find out about gadolinium risks and injuries and your legal right to compensation.
Gadolinium metal is obtained from its oxide or salts by heating with calcium at 1450 °C under argon atmosphere. Sponge gadolinium can be produced by reducing molten GdCl3 with an appropriate metal at temperatures below 1312 °C (melting point of Gd) in a reduced pressure.3
Applications
Gadolinium has no large-scale applications but has a variety of specialized uses.
Gadolinium has the highest neutron cross-section among any stable nuclides: 61,000 barns for 155Gd and 259,000 barns for 157Gd. 157Gd has been used to target tumors in neutron therapy. This element is very effective for use with neutron radiography and in shielding of nuclear reactors. It is used as a secondary, emergency shut-down measure in some nuclear reactors, particularly of the CANDU type.3 Gadolinium is also used in nuclear marine propulsion systems as a burnable poison.
Gadolinium also possesses unusual metallurgic properties, with as little as 1% of gadolinium improving the workability and resistance of iron, chromium, and related alloys to high temperatures and oxidation.
Gadolinium is paramagnetic at room temperature, with a ferromagnetic Curie point of 17 °C.12 Paramagnetic ions, such as gadolinium, move differently within a magnetic field. This trait makes gadolinium useful for magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). Solutions of organic gadolinium complexes and gadolinium compounds are used as intravenous MRI contrast agent to enhance images in medical magnetic resonance imaging and magnetic resonance angiography (MRA) procedures. Magnevist is the most widespread example.1314 Nanotubes packed with gadolinium, dubbed "gadonanotubes," are 40 times more effective than this traditional gadolinium contrast agent.15 Once injected, gadolinium-based contrast agents accumulate in abnormal tissues of the brain and body. This accumulation provides a greater contrast between normal and abnormal tissues, allowing doctors to better locate uncommon cell growths and tumors.
Gadolinium-153 helps calibrate positron emission tomography (PET) systems that are used in nuclear medicine for functional imaging. This PET image of the human brain shows the difference between a normal brain and the clinically depressed patient. The blue color indicates less glucose metabolism in a normal brain. The green, yellow, and red colors indicate areas of higher glucose metabolism characteristic of a depressed patient.16
HHS Budget For 2012 Announced: A Peek At Obama's Health Priorities
Although the $79.9 billion President Obama is requesting in discretionary spending for the HHS Department is "slightly above the 2010 funding level," The Washington Post points out that figure actually represents a slight decrease from the agency's Fiscal Year 2010 budget -- by some 0.9 percent.
gadolinium Facts, information, pictures | Encyclopedia.com ...
Get information, facts, and pictures about gadolinium at Encyclopedia.com. Make research projects and school reports about gadolinium easy with credible ...
Gadolinium is also used in other imaging besides MRIs. In X-ray systems, gadolinium is contained in the phosphor layer, suspended in a polymer matrix at the detector. Terbium-doped gadolinium oxysulfide (Gd2O2S: Tb) at the phosphor layer converts the X-rays released from the source into light. This material emits green light at 540 nm due to the presence of Tb3+, which is very useful for enhancing the imaging quality. The energy conversion of Gd is up to 20%, which means that one-fifth of the X-rays striking the phosphor layer can be converted into light photons. Gadolinium oxyorthosilicate (Gd2SiO5, GSO; usually doped by 0.1–1% of Ce) is a single crystal that is used as a scintillator in medical imaging such as positron emission tomography or for detecting neutrons.17
Gadolinium-153 is produced in a nuclear reactor from elemental europium or enriched gadolinium targets. It has a half-life of 240±10 days and emits gamma radiation with strong peaks at 41 keV and 102 keV. It is used in many quality assurance applications, such as line sources and calibration phantoms, to ensure that nuclear medicine imaging systems operate correctly and produce useful images of radioisotope distribution inside the patient.16 It is also used as a gamma ray source in X-ray absorption measurements or in bone density gauges for osteoporosis screening, as well as in the Lixiscope portable X-ray imaging system.18
Gadolinium is used for making gadolinium yttrium garnet (Gd:Y3Al5O12); it has microwave applications and is used in fabrication of various optical components and as substrate material for magneto–optical films.
Gadolinium compounds are also used for making green phosphors for colour TV tubes and compact discs.
Gadolinium Gallium Garnet (GGG, Gd3Ga5O12) was used for imitation diamonds and for computer bubble memory.19
Biological role
Gadolinium has no known native biological role, but its compounds are used as research tools in biomedicine. Gd3+ compounds are components of MRI contrast agents. It is used in various ion channel electrophysiology experiments to block sodium leak channels, as well as to stretch activated ion channels.20
Safety
As a free ion, gadolinium is highly toxic, but MRI contrast agents are chelated compounds and are considered safe. The toxicity depends on the strength of the chelating agent.21 US Food and Drug Administration approved Gd chelated contrast agents include: Omniscan, Multihance, Magnevist, ProHance, Vasovist, Eovist and OptiMARK.22
Contrast Media Reactions Are Allergic, but Minor
Final results of the prospective French CIRTACI trial are in: contrast media for diagnostic imaging are very safe in general, as long as radiologists are vigilant for patients with allergies, asthma, or previous reactions to contrast agents. The vast majority are more itchy than serious.
Gadolinium MRI / MRA Causes Nephrogenic Systemic Fibrosis
Learn about the dangers of gadolinium use in MRI and MRA exams including the debilitating disease nephrogenic systemic fibrosis.
Gadolinium MRI contrast agents have proved safer than the iodinated contrast agents used in X-ray radiography or computed tomography. Anaphylactoid reactions are rare, occurring in approx. 0.03–0.1%.23
Although gadolinium agents have proved useful for patients with renal impairment, in patients with severe renal failure requiring dialysis there is a risk of a rare but serious illnesses, such as nephrogenic systemic fibrosis24 and nephrogenic fibrosing dermopathy,25 that may be linked to the use of certain gadolinium-containing agents. Current guidelines in the United States are that dialysis patients should only receive gadolinium agents where essential, and that dialysis should be performed as soon as possible after the scan is complete, in order to remove the agent from the body promptly.26 However, after several years of controversy during which up to 100 Danish patients have been gadolinium poisoned (and some died) after Omniscan use, it has been admitted by the Norwegian medical company Nycomed that they were aware of the dangers of using gadolinium based agents for their product.27
References
^ Charles Kittel (1996). Introduction to Solid State Physics. New York: Wiley. p. 449.
^ a b The Elements, Theodore Gray, Black Dog & Leventhal Publishers, 2009
^ a b c d e f Greenwood, Norman N.; Earnshaw, Alan. (1997), Chemistry of the Elements (2nd ed.), Oxford: Butterworth-Heinemann, ISBN 0080379419
^ "Gadolinium". Neutron News (NIST) 3 (3): 29. 1992. http://www.ncnr.nist.gov/resources/n-lengths/elements/gd.html. Retrieved 2009-06-06.
^ Karl Gschneidner, Jr. and Kerry Gibson (2001-12-07). "Magnetic refrigerator successfully tested". Ames Laboratory. http://www.external.ameslab.gov/news/release/01magneticrefrig.htm. Retrieved 2006-12-17.
^ Suenaga, Kazu; Taniguchi, Risa; Shimada, Takashi; Okazaki, Toshiya; Shinohara, Hisanori; Iijima, Sumio (2003). "Evidence for the Intramolecular Motion of Gd Atoms in a Gd2@C92 Nanopeapod". Nano Letters 3: 1395. doi:10.1021/nl034621c.
^ Hashimoto, A.; Yorimitsu, H; Ajima, K; Suenaga, K; Isobe, H; Miyawaki, J; Yudasaka, M; Iijima, S et al. (2004). "Selective deposition of a gadolinium(III) cluster in a hole opening of single-wall carbon nanohorn". Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 101 (23): 8527. doi:10.1073/pnas.0400596101. PMC 423227. PMID 15163794. http://www.pubmedcentral.nih.gov/articlerender.fcgi?tool=pmcentrez&artid=423227.
^ Holleman, A. F.; Wiberg, E. (2001), Inorganic Chemistry, San Diego: Academic Press, ISBN 0-12-352651-5
^ "Chemical reactions of Gadolinium". Webelements. https://www.webelements.com/gadolinium/chemistry.html. Retrieved 2009-06-06.
^ Cotton (2007). Advanced inorganic chemistry, 6th ed. Wiley-India. p. 1128. ISBN 8126513381. http://books.google.com/?id=U3MWRONWAmMC&pg=PA1128.
^ Danevich, F. A. et al. (2001). "Quest for double beta decay of 160Gd and Ce isotopes". Nucl. Phys. A 694: 375. doi:10.1016/S0375-9474(01)00983-6.
^ Curie Point of Gadolinium
^ Gary Liney (2006). MRI in clinical practice. Springer. pp. 13;30. ISBN 184628161X. http://books.google.com/?id=xpCffxNrCXYC&pg=PA13.
^ Kenneth N. Raymond; Valerie C. Pierre (2005). "Next Generation, High Relaxivity Gadolinium MRI Agents". Bioconjugate Chemistry 16 (1): 3. doi:10.1021/bc049817y. PMID 15656568.
^ Magnets Guide Stem Cells to Damaged Hearts Dec, 2009
^ a b "Gadolinium-153". Pacific Northwest National Laboratory. http://radioisotopes.pnl.gov/gadolinium.stm. Retrieved 2009-06-06.
^ Ryzhikov, V. D.; Grinev, B. V.; Pirogov, E. N.; Onyshchenko, G. M.; Ivanov, A. I.; Bondar, V. G.; Katrunov, K. A.; Kostyukevich, S. A. (2005). "Use of gadolinium oxyorthosilicate scintillators in x-ray radiometers". Optical Engineering 44: 016403. doi:10.1117/1.1829713.
^ "Lixi, Inc.". http://www.ndt.net/news/lixi.htm. Retrieved 2009-06-06.
^ C. R. Hammond (2000). The Elements, in Handbook of Chemistry and Physics 81st edition. CRC press. ISBN 0849304814.
^ Yeung, Ew; Allen, Dg (August 2004). "Stretch-activated channels in stretch-induced muscle damage: role in muscular dystrophy.". Clinical and experimental pharmacology & physiology 31 (8): 551–6. doi:10.1111/j.1440-1681.2004.04027.x. ISSN 0305-1870. PMID 15298550.
^ "Questions and Answers on Magnetic resonance imaging". http://www.ismrm.org/special/EMEA2.pdf. Retrieved 2009-06-06.
^ "Information on Gadolinium-Containing Contrast Agents". http://www.fda.gov/cder/drug/infopage/gcca/default.htm.
^ Murphy KJ, Brunberg JA, Cohan RH (1 October 1996). "Adverse reactions to gadolinium contrast media: A review of 36 cases". AJR Am J Roentgenol 167 (4): 847–9. PMID 8819369. http://www.ajronline.org/cgi/pmidlookup?view=long&pmid=8819369.
^ H.S. Thomsen, S.K. Morcos and P. Dawson (November 2006). "Is there a causal relation between the administration of gadolinium-based contrast media and the development of nephrogenic systemic fibrosis (NSF)?". Clinical Radiology 61 (11): 905–6. doi:10.1016/j.crad.2006.09.003. PMID 17018301.
^ Grobner T. (2006-01-23). "Gadolinium — a specific trigger for the development of nephrogenic fibrosing dermopathy and nephrogenic systemic fibrosis?". Nephrology Dialysis Transplantation 21 (4): 1104–8. doi:10.1093/ndt/gfk062. PMID 16431890.
^ "FDA Public Health Advisory: Gadolinium-containing Contrast Agents for Magnetic Resonance Imaging". http://www.fda.gov/cder/drug/advisory/gadolinium_agents.htm. Retrieved 2009-06-06. dead link
^ "Nyhedsavisen: Medicinalfirma fortiede at stof var farligt". http://avisen.dk/medicinalfirma-fortiede-at-stof-var-farligt_6742.aspx. Retrieved 2010-11-05.
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to: Gadolinium
Look up gadolinium in Wiktionary, the free dictionary.
WebElements.com – Gadolinium
Nephrogenic Systemic Fibrosis – Complication of Gadolinium MR Contrast (series of images at MedPix website)
It's Elemental – Gadolinium
refrigerator uses gadolinium metal that heats up when exposed to magnetic field
FDA Advisory on Gadolinium-Based Contrast
Abdominal MR imaging: important considerations for evaluation of gadolinium enhancement Rafael O.P. de Campos, Vasco Herédia, Ersan Altun, Richard C. Semelka, Department of Radiology University of North Carolina Hospitals Chapel Hill
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Pb
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Fr
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U
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Pu
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Cm
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Cf
Es
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Md
No
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Db
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Hs
Mt
Ds
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Uup
Uuh
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Large version
Contrast MRI Best at Finding Liver Trouble - But Timing Matters
For spotting the tiniest metastases inside the liver, MRI with the liver-specific gadolinium-based contrast agent Primovist (gadoxetic acid) was far and away the top choice of surgeons in an eight-country multicenter study. The surgeons were given a chance to use various imaging methods for colorectal center patients and judge their value. The same contrast agent is also proving adept at ...
Gadolinium Class Action Lawsuit Settlements Lawyer Attorney ...
Gadolinium Class Action Lawsuit Settlements lawyer & attorney if hurt from Gadolinium injection for MRI. MRA dye side effects Nephrogenic Systemic ...
Super-thin Superconducting Cables
New compact cables show promise for power transmission and high-field magnets. Researchers at the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) have found a way to make high-temperature superconducting power cables that can carry as much current as existing superconducting cables while being a tenth of the diameter. The thin, flexible cables could open up new applications in electrical ...
Magnetic Resonance TIP - MRI Database : Gadolinium
Gadolinium in a chelated form such as DTPA has low side effects. ... (Gd) Gadolinium is a Lanthanide element that is paramagnetic in its trivalent state. ...
WebElements Periodic Table of the Elements | Gadolinium ...
This WebElements periodic table page contains Essential information for the element gadolinium
Mesothelioma Litigation Attorney, Christopher Placitella to Lead Expert Panel on Mass Tort Litigation in New Jersey
RED BANK, N.J., March 1, 2011 /PRNewswire/ -- The New Jersey Institute for Continuing Legal Education has announced their 'Evolving World of Handling Mass Tort Claims' conference, to be held June 2, 2011. This mass tort litigation event will feature state and local experts in the field of mass tort litigation led by attorneys Christopher Placitella , partner at the law firm of Cohen, Placitella ...



















