10:30 |
178. |
Per-Subject and Per-Brain-Region Hyperoxic (HO) and
Hypercapnic (HC) BOLD Calibration to Investigate
Neurovascular Metabolism Coupling Linearity
Clarisse Ildiko Mark1, G. B. Pike1
1McConnell Brain Imaging Center,
Montreal Neurological Institute, McGill University,
Montreal, Quebec, Canada
Estimates of the coupling
relationship (n) between changes in cerebral metabolic rate
of oxygen (ΔCMRO2) and blood flow (ΔCBF) under
neuronal activation, key in interpreting BOLD results, are
highly sensitive to variability in individual subjects BOLD
calibration (M)-values and brain regions. We thereby sought
to acquire precise calibration data under robust control of
HC and HO levels, together with visual stimulation of
varying frequency and voluntary motor tasks. Based on
low-variability M-values, our findings demonstrate a tightly
coupled and linear flow-metabolism relationship in the
visual cortex, an indication that oxygen demand from
activated neurons across visual-frequencies is met by
oxidative metabolism. |
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10:42 |
179. |
Baseline
BOLD Correlation Accounts for Inter-Subject Variability in
Task-Evoked BOLD Responses
Xiao
Liu1,2, Xiao-Hong Zhu1, Wei Chen1,2
1CMRR, radiology, University of
Minnesota, Minneapolis, MN, United States; 2Biomedical
Engineering, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, MN,
United States
To investigate whether
subjects’ ongoing brain activity can affect their response
to external stimulation, fMRI BOLD signals were acquired
from human visual cortex under conditions with/without
visual stimulation. It was found that correlation strength
but not fluctuation magnitude of spontaneous (baseline) BOLD
signals is positively correlated (R2 = 0.68, p-value
= 2.3 × 10-4) with the amplitude of evoked BOLD
responses to visual stimulus. This finding suggests that
synchronization strength of ongoing brain activity may have
an important effect on evoked brain activity, even at the
early stage of sensory systems. Moreover, this study
provides a neurophysiology basis for quantitatively
understanding large inter-subject BOLD variability commonly
observed in many fMRI studies. |
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10:54 |
180. |
Calibration of the Amplitude of FMRI Contrast (β) Using
Fractional Volume of Gray Matter: The Spatial and
Inter-Subject β Calibrations
Wanyong Shin1, Hong Gu1, Qihong Zou1,
Pradeep Kurup1, Yihong Yang1
1Neuroimaging Research Branch,
National Institute on Drug Abuse, National Institutes of
Health, Baltimore, MD, United States
The amplitude of BOLD
contrast during brain activation (commonly called β) is
widely used in fMRI study to monitor the neuronal activity.
However, it is observed that β varies substantially over
subjects, which is referred as inter-subject β variation. In
this study, we propose a new calibrated fMRI method based on
fractional volume of gray matter measurement using FRASIER
method in which the spatial β variations and the
inter-subject β variations are calibrated, and we show that
the statistical power is significantly improved after the
calibration in an fMRI study with a visual task. |
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11:06 |
181. |
Robustly
Accounting for Vascular Reactivity Differences Across
Subjects Using Breath-Hold
Kevin
Murphy1, Ashley D. Harris1, Richard G.
Wise1
1CUBRIC, Cardiff University
Brain Research Imaging Centre, School of Psychology,
Cardiff, United Kingdom
Separating BOLD vascular and
metabolic responses is often achieved using hypercapnic
challenges. A simple way of elevating blood CO2
concentrations to measure vascular reactivity is
breath-holding. Two aspects of this vascular reactivity
measure are often neglected: breath-holds are usually
modelled as blocks even though CO2 accumulates
over time and increases in CO2 differ between
subjects, both of which must be considered when using
vascular reactivity as a calibration tool. This study
determines that the appropriate model for the BOLD
breath-hold response is derived from end-tidal CO2
traces and that individual differences in CO2
increases must be taken into account. |
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11:18 |
182. |
The
Relationship Between M in “Calibrated fMRI” and the
Physiologic Modulators of fMRI
Hanzhang Lu1,
Joanna Hutchison2, Feng Xu1, Bart
Rypma2
1Advanced
Imaging Research Center, University of Texas Southwestern
Medical Center, Dallas, TX, United States; 2Center
for BrainHealth, University of Texas at Dallas, Dallas, TX,
United States
The “calibrated fMRI”
technique requires a hypercapnia or hyperoxia calibration
experiment in order to estimate the factor “M”. It would be
desirable to be able to obtain the M value without the need
of a gas challenge calibration. According to the analytical
expression of M, it is a function of two baseline
physiologic parameters, baseline CBF and baseline venous
oxygenation, both of which have recently been shown to be
significant modulators of fMRI signal. Here we studied the
relationship among M, baseline CBF and baseline venous
oxygenation, and assessed the possibility of estimating M
from the baseline physiologic parameters. |
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11:30 |
183. |
Hemodynamic Responses Following Brief Breath-Holding and
Visual Stimulation Reconcile the Vascular Compliance and
Sustained Oxygen Metabolism Origins for the BOLD
Post-Stimulus Undershoot in Human Brain
Jun
Hua1, Robert Stevens1, Alan J. Huang1,
James J. Pekar1, Peter C. M. van Zijl1
1Department of
Radiology, The Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, MD,
United States
BOLD studies of visual
stimulation show a post-stimulus undershoot, whereas
breath-hold studies don’t. BOLD/CBF/CBV/arterial-CBV
dynamics following visual stimulation and breath-hold were
measured to investigate which mechanism (vascular/metabolic)
dominates the undershoot. After visual stimulation,
arterial-CBV/CBF returned to baseline in ~8s/15s,
respectively, while BOLD undershoot lasted for ~30s, during
which elevated post-arterial-CBV (2.4+/-1.8%) and CMRO2
(10.6+/-7.4%) were observed. Following breath-hold, BOLD/CBF/CBV/arterial-CBV
all recovered within ~20s and no BOLD undershoot, elevated
post-arterial-CBV and CMRO2 were observed. These data
suggest that both delayed post-arterial-CBV return and
enduring oxygen consumption affect the undershoot, with
contributions estimated as 20+/-16% and 79+/-19%,
respectively, under our experimental conditions. |
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11:42 |
184. |
BOLD
Impulse Response Functions and Baseline-Dependent Response
Adaptation
Basavaraju G. Sanganahalli1, Peter Herman1,2,
Hal Blumenfeld3, Fahmeed Hyder4
1Diagnostic
Radiology, Yale University, New Haven, CT, United States;
2Human Physiology, Semmelweis University,
Budapest, Hungary; 3Neurology, Neurosurgery and
Neuroscience, Yale University, New Haven, CT, United States;
4Diagnostic Radiology and Biomedical Engineering,
Yale University, New Haven, CT, United States
BOLD impulse response
functions (IRFs) show variability (i.e, presence/absence of
a delayed undershoot) across different conditions (e.g.,
stimuli, regions). Could these BOLD-IRF differences be due
to the system’s variable adaptive properties, which are
known to differ with baseline? Extracellular data were
compared with BOLD signal (11.7T) during forepaw stimulation
under domitor and α-chloralose anesthesia in rats. BOLD-IRFs
were nearly identical in the early phase but different in
the late phase. Domitor, where responses are more adapted,
featured a long time-constant undershoot. These results
suggest that the late phase could potentially represent
differences in adaptive properties across baseline states. |
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11:54 |
185. |
ATP
Production by Oxidative Metabolism and Blood Flow
Augmentation by Non-Oxidative Glycolysis in Activated Human
Visual Cortex
Ai-Ling Lin1,
Jia-Hong Gao2, Timothy Q. Duong1,
Peter T. Fox1
1Research
Imaging Institute, University of Texas Health Science Center
at San Antonio, San Antonio, TX, United States; 2Brain
Research Imaging Center, University of Chicago, Chicago, IL,
United States
The purpose of the study was
to investigate the contributions of oxidative verses
non-oxidative metabolism to (1) ATP (energy) production (JATP);
and (2) cerebral blood flow (CBF) augmentation, during
neuronal activation. Cerebral oxygen metabolic rate, blood
flow and lactate concentration were determined using
concurrent fMRI and 1H MRS with visual
stimulations at different flickering frequencies. Our
results provide additional supportive evidences that (1)the
energy demand for brain activations is small and is met
through oxidative metabolism; and (2) CBF can be regulated
by non-oxidative glycolysis, rather than by oxygen demand. |
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12:06 |
185.5. |
Modeling the Effect of Changes in
Hematocrit, O2 Extraction Fraction, and Blood Volume
Distribution on the BOLD Signal and Estimates of CMRO2
Change with a Calibrated BOLD Method
V. Griffeth1,2, R. Buxton3
1Department
of Bioengineering, University of California, San Diego, La
Jolla, California, United States, 2Medical
Scientist Training Program, University of California, San
Diego, La Jolla, California, United States, 3Department
of Radiology, University of California, San Diego, La Jolla,
California, United States
We applied a calibrated-BOLD methodology to
assess effects of caffeine consumption on coupling of CBF
and cerebral metabolic rate of O2 (CMRO2responses to a
visual stimulus. We found a large increase in ΔCMRO2
after administration of caffeine, both as a fraction of the
current baseline state and in a more absolute sense referred
to the pre-caffeine baseline. More modest changes were found
in the CBF response. The decrease of the CBF/CMRO2 coupling
ratio n offsets the effects of the reduced baseline CBF due
to caffeine and the larger fractional change of CBF with
stimulation leaving the BOLD response unchanged. |
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12:18 |
186. |
Negative
Cerebral Blood Flow and BOLD Responses to Somatosensory
Stimulation in Spontaneously Hypertensive Rats
Renata Ferranti Leoni1,2, Draulio Barros de
Araujo2, Afonso Costa Silva3
1Cerebral
Microcirculation Unit , National Institute of Neurological
Diseases and Stroke - NINDS/NIH, Bethesda, MD, United
States; 2Department of Physics and Mathematics,
University of Sao Paulo, Ribeirao Preto, Sao Paulo, Brazil;
3Cerebral Microcirculation Unit, National
Institute of Neurological Diseases and Stroke - NINDS/NIH,
Bethesda, MD, United States
The presence of sustained
negative fMRI response to focal brain stimulation can be
explained either by decreased local neuronal activity
(neuronal surround inhibition) or by decreased
cerebrovascular reserve (vascular steal effect). Here we
measured the CBF and BOLD responses to somatosensory
stimulation in spontaneously hypertensive rats (SHR) and
normotensive controls, to test the origin of negative fMRI
responses. 20/30 SHR, but only 3/25 normotensive rats,
presented robust negative CBF and BOLD responses. We
conclude that the negative fMRI responses were largely
related to a vascular steal effect and not due to neuronal
surround inhibition. |
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