4.6 Review

Mapping oxidative metabolism in the human brain with calibrated fMRI in health and disease

期刊

JOURNAL OF CEREBRAL BLOOD FLOW AND METABOLISM
卷 42, 期 7, 页码 1139-1162

出版社

SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC
DOI: 10.1177/0271678X221077338

关键词

Calibrated fMRI; calibrated BOLD; oxidative metabolism; glucose metabolism; gas calibration; hypercapnic calibration; hyperoxic calibration; dual calibration; gas-free calibration; vascular BOLD; neuronal BOLD; neuroenergetics; local-field potential; multi-unit activity; gradient-spin echo

资金

  1. Canadian Institutes of Health Research [FDN 148398, PJT 169688]
  2. Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada [FGPIN 418443]
  3. National Institutes of Health [R01 NS-100106, R01 MH067528, R01 MH-111424]

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Recent studies have shown that gas-free calibrated fMRI can effectively measure the cerebral metabolic rate of oxygen consumption (CMRO2) and have potential clinical applications. This review highlights the technological advances in gas-free calibrated fMRI experiments and their impact on neurological and neurodegenerative disease research.
Conventional functional MRI (fMRI) with blood-oxygenation level dependent (BOLD) contrast is an important tool for mapping human brain activity non-invasively. Recent interest in quantitative fMRI has renewed the importance of oxidative neuroenergetics as reflected by cerebral metabolic rate of oxygen consumption (CMRO2) to support brain function. Dynamic CMRO2 mapping by calibrated fMRI require multi-modal measurements of BOLD signal along with cerebral blood flow (CBF) and/or volume (CBV). In human subjects this calibration is typically performed using a gas mixture containing small amounts of carbon dioxide and/or oxygen-enriched medical air, which are thought to produce changes in CBF (and CBV) and BOLD signal with minimal or no CMRO2 changes. However non-human studies have demonstrated that the calibration can also be achieved without gases, revealing good agreement between CMRO2 changes and underlying neuronal activity (e.g., multi-unit activity and local field potential). Given the simpler set-up of gas-free calibrated fMRI, there is evidence of recent clinical applications for this less intrusive direction. This up-to-date review emphasizes technological advances for such translational gas-free calibrated fMRI experiments, also covering historical progression of the calibrated fMRI field that is impacting neurological and neurodegenerative investigations of the human brain.

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