Gadolinium Toxicity

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Ten Years Later: Gadolinium Toxicity – A Disease of Degrees

Editorial by Sharon Williams
November 12, 2025

In early 2015, I opened a post with the following question: Why does a Gadolinium Toxicity diagnosis have to be full-blown NSF (Nephrogenic Systemic Fibrosis) or nothing at all? I went on to say that we believe Gadolinium Toxicity is a “disease of degrees”, which can manifest itself in many ways depending on how much gadolinium someone retains. And it can occur in patients with normal renal function.

Here we are ten years later, in 2025, and our belief about retained gadolinium causing a disease with varying degrees of severity is stronger than ever. That belief is based on the results of the Patient Survey that Hubbs Grimm and I conducted last year along with patient advocates Sarah Ratnam and Catriona Walsh. We recently released our first paper that focuses on the symptoms reported by 316 survey participants after MRIs with a gadolinium-based contrast agent (GBCA). The patients had normal and near normal renal function at the time of their MRIs. 185 of the participants have one or more test results that confirm they retained gadolinium for more than 30 days and for as long as 22 years after contrast administration, including 14 years in pelvic bone, and 13 years in sigmoid colon tissue.

The similarities between the symptom reporting patterns of the survey participants closely mirror those published about the clinical presentation of early-phase NSF as described by Marckmann & Skov (2009). Based on what Marckmann wrote about NSF, it seems that NSF itself had varying degrees of severity. Marckmann (2009 & 2011) wrote that there were significant individual differences in the clinical course of NSF, even in end-stage renal disease (ESRD) patients, which seems to indicate that retained gadolinium could trigger a range of symptoms, with a varied clinical outcome in all patient populations.

The variability of the symptoms shows that even in severely renally impaired patients, gadolinium-induced NSF did not cause the exact same set of symptoms or level of severity.

Is NSF itself the “disease of degrees”? Do all patients affected by gadolinium manifest NSF to varying extents, but without the “N” or nephrogenic component? The many similarities between the early clinical picture of NSF and the symptoms reported by participants in our Patient Survey suggest that they do.

Rather than a new or separate disease entity for patients with normal renal function, such as Gadolinium Deposition Disease (GDD) as described by Semelka & Ramalho (2023), our survey findings suggest that GDD and NSF may reflect different points along a continuum of gadolinium-induced toxicity. In other words, what we are observing may be one gadolinium-induced disease process manifesting with varying degrees of severity, which is how Marckmann described NSF in his Severity Grading in 2009.

Gadolinium has the Potential to Harm All Patients (more…)