Strangman Gary, Culver Joseph P, Thompson John H, Boas David A
Neural Systems Group, NMR Center, Massachusetts General Hospital-Harvard Medical School, Harvard-MIT Division of Health Sciences and Technology, Charlestown 02129, USA.
Neuroimage. 2002 Oct;17(2):719-31.
Near-infrared spectroscopy (NIRS) has been used to noninvasively monitor adult human brain function in a wide variety of tasks. While rough spatial correspondences with maps generated from functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) have been found in such experiments, the amplitude correspondences between the two recording modalities have not been fully characterized. To do so, we simultaneously acquired NIRS and blood-oxygenation level-dependent (BOLD) fMRI data and compared Delta(1/BOLD) (approximately R(2)(*)) to changes in oxyhemoglobin, deoxyhemoglobin, and total hemoglobin concentrations derived from the NIRS data from subjects performing a simple motor task. We expected the correlation with deoxyhemoglobin to be strongest, due to the causal relation between changes in deoxyhemoglobin concentrations and BOLD signal. Instead we found highly variable correlations, suggesting the need to account for individual subject differences in our NIRS calculations. We argue that the variability resulted from systematic errors associated with each of the signals, including: (1) partial volume errors due to focal concentration changes, (2) wavelength dependence of this partial volume effect, (3) tissue model errors, and (4) possible spatial incongruence between oxy- and deoxyhemoglobin concentration changes. After such effects were accounted for, strong correlations were found between fMRI changes and all optical measures, with oxyhemoglobin providing the strongest correlation. Importantly, this finding held even when including scalp, skull, and inactive brain tissue in the average BOLD signal. This may reflect, at least in part, the superior contrast-to-noise ratio for oxyhemoglobin relative to deoxyhemoglobin (from optical measurements), rather than physiology related to BOLD signal interpretation.
近红外光谱技术(NIRS)已被用于在各种任务中对成人大脑功能进行无创监测。虽然在此类实验中已发现与功能磁共振成像(fMRI)生成的图谱存在大致的空间对应关系,但两种记录方式之间的幅度对应关系尚未得到充分表征。为此,我们同时采集了NIRS和血氧水平依赖(BOLD)功能磁共振成像数据,并将Delta(1/BOLD)(约为R(2)(*))与执行简单运动任务的受试者的NIRS数据中氧合血红蛋白、脱氧血红蛋白和总血红蛋白浓度的变化进行了比较。由于脱氧血红蛋白浓度变化与BOLD信号之间存在因果关系,我们预期与脱氧血红蛋白的相关性最强。然而,我们发现相关性高度可变,这表明在我们的NIRS计算中需要考虑个体差异。我们认为这种变异性是由与每个信号相关的系统误差导致的,包括:(1)由于局部浓度变化引起的部分容积误差,(2)这种部分容积效应的波长依赖性,(3)组织模型误差,以及(4)氧合血红蛋白和脱氧血红蛋白浓度变化之间可能存在的空间不一致性。在考虑了这些影响之后,我们发现功能磁共振成像变化与所有光学测量之间存在强相关性,其中氧合血红蛋白的相关性最强。重要的是,即使在平均BOLD信号中包括头皮、颅骨和非活动脑组织时,这一发现仍然成立。这可能至少部分反映了相对于脱氧血红蛋白(来自光学测量),氧合血红蛋白具有更高的对比度噪声比,而不是与BOLD信号解释相关的生理学因素。