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Neurovascular and Neurometabolic Couplings in Dynamic Calibrated fMRI: Transient Oxidative Neuroenergetics for Block-Design and Event-Related Paradigms

Functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) with blood-oxygenation level dependent (BOLD) contrast is an important tool for mapping brain activity. Interest in quantitative fMRI has renewed awareness in importance of oxidative neuroenergetics, as reflected by cerebral metabolic rate of oxygen consu...

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Autores principales: Hyder, Fahmeed, Sanganahalli, Basavaraju G., Herman, Peter, Coman, Daniel, Maandag, Natasja J. G., Behar, Kevin L., Blumenfeld, Hal, Rothman, Douglas L.
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Frontiers Research Foundation 2010
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2936934/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20838476
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fnene.2010.00018
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author Hyder, Fahmeed
Sanganahalli, Basavaraju G.
Herman, Peter
Coman, Daniel
Maandag, Natasja J. G.
Behar, Kevin L.
Blumenfeld, Hal
Rothman, Douglas L.
author_facet Hyder, Fahmeed
Sanganahalli, Basavaraju G.
Herman, Peter
Coman, Daniel
Maandag, Natasja J. G.
Behar, Kevin L.
Blumenfeld, Hal
Rothman, Douglas L.
author_sort Hyder, Fahmeed
collection PubMed
description Functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) with blood-oxygenation level dependent (BOLD) contrast is an important tool for mapping brain activity. Interest in quantitative fMRI has renewed awareness in importance of oxidative neuroenergetics, as reflected by cerebral metabolic rate of oxygen consumption [Formula: see text] for supporting brain function. Relationships between BOLD signal and the underlying neurophysiological parameters have been elucidated to allow determination of dynamic changes in [Formula: see text] by “calibrated fMRI,” which require multi-modal measurements of BOLD signal along with cerebral blood flow (CBF) and volume (CBV). But how do [Formula: see text] changes, steady-state or transient, derived from calibrated fMRI compare with neural activity recordings of local field potential (LFP) and/or multi-unit activity (MUA)? Here we discuss recent findings primarily from animal studies which allow high magnetic fields studies for superior BOLD sensitivity as well as multi-modal CBV and CBF measurements in conjunction with LFP and MUA recordings from activated sites. A key observation is that while relationships between neural activity and sensory stimulus features range from linear to non-linear, associations between hyperemic components (BOLD, CBF, CBV) and neural activity (LFP, MUA) are almost always linear. More importantly, the results demonstrate good agreement between the changes in [Formula: see text] and independent measures of LFP or MUA. The tight neurovascular and neurometabolic couplings, observed from steady-state conditions to events separated by <200 ms, suggest rapid oxygen equilibration between blood and tissue pools and thus calibrated fMRI at high magnetic fields can provide high spatiotemporal mapping of [Formula: see text] changes.
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spelling pubmed-29369342010-09-13 Neurovascular and Neurometabolic Couplings in Dynamic Calibrated fMRI: Transient Oxidative Neuroenergetics for Block-Design and Event-Related Paradigms Hyder, Fahmeed Sanganahalli, Basavaraju G. Herman, Peter Coman, Daniel Maandag, Natasja J. G. Behar, Kevin L. Blumenfeld, Hal Rothman, Douglas L. Front Neuroenergetics Neuroscience Functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) with blood-oxygenation level dependent (BOLD) contrast is an important tool for mapping brain activity. Interest in quantitative fMRI has renewed awareness in importance of oxidative neuroenergetics, as reflected by cerebral metabolic rate of oxygen consumption [Formula: see text] for supporting brain function. Relationships between BOLD signal and the underlying neurophysiological parameters have been elucidated to allow determination of dynamic changes in [Formula: see text] by “calibrated fMRI,” which require multi-modal measurements of BOLD signal along with cerebral blood flow (CBF) and volume (CBV). But how do [Formula: see text] changes, steady-state or transient, derived from calibrated fMRI compare with neural activity recordings of local field potential (LFP) and/or multi-unit activity (MUA)? Here we discuss recent findings primarily from animal studies which allow high magnetic fields studies for superior BOLD sensitivity as well as multi-modal CBV and CBF measurements in conjunction with LFP and MUA recordings from activated sites. A key observation is that while relationships between neural activity and sensory stimulus features range from linear to non-linear, associations between hyperemic components (BOLD, CBF, CBV) and neural activity (LFP, MUA) are almost always linear. More importantly, the results demonstrate good agreement between the changes in [Formula: see text] and independent measures of LFP or MUA. The tight neurovascular and neurometabolic couplings, observed from steady-state conditions to events separated by <200 ms, suggest rapid oxygen equilibration between blood and tissue pools and thus calibrated fMRI at high magnetic fields can provide high spatiotemporal mapping of [Formula: see text] changes. Frontiers Research Foundation 2010-08-19 /pmc/articles/PMC2936934/ /pubmed/20838476 http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fnene.2010.00018 Text en Copyright © 2010 Hyder, Sanganahalli, Herman, Coman, Maandag, Behar, Blumenfeld and Rothman. http://www.frontiersin.org/licenseagreement This is an open-access article subject to an exclusive license agreement between the authors and the Frontiers Research Foundation, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original authors and source are credited.
spellingShingle Neuroscience
Hyder, Fahmeed
Sanganahalli, Basavaraju G.
Herman, Peter
Coman, Daniel
Maandag, Natasja J. G.
Behar, Kevin L.
Blumenfeld, Hal
Rothman, Douglas L.
Neurovascular and Neurometabolic Couplings in Dynamic Calibrated fMRI: Transient Oxidative Neuroenergetics for Block-Design and Event-Related Paradigms
title Neurovascular and Neurometabolic Couplings in Dynamic Calibrated fMRI: Transient Oxidative Neuroenergetics for Block-Design and Event-Related Paradigms
title_full Neurovascular and Neurometabolic Couplings in Dynamic Calibrated fMRI: Transient Oxidative Neuroenergetics for Block-Design and Event-Related Paradigms
title_fullStr Neurovascular and Neurometabolic Couplings in Dynamic Calibrated fMRI: Transient Oxidative Neuroenergetics for Block-Design and Event-Related Paradigms
title_full_unstemmed Neurovascular and Neurometabolic Couplings in Dynamic Calibrated fMRI: Transient Oxidative Neuroenergetics for Block-Design and Event-Related Paradigms
title_short Neurovascular and Neurometabolic Couplings in Dynamic Calibrated fMRI: Transient Oxidative Neuroenergetics for Block-Design and Event-Related Paradigms
title_sort neurovascular and neurometabolic couplings in dynamic calibrated fmri: transient oxidative neuroenergetics for block-design and event-related paradigms
topic Neuroscience
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2936934/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20838476
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fnene.2010.00018
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