Blumenfeld Hal
Department of Neurology, Magnetic Resonance Research Center, Yale University School of Medicine, New Haven, Connecticut 06520-8018, USA.
Epilepsia. 2007;48 Suppl 4:18-26. doi: 10.1111/j.1528-1167.2007.01238.x.
Functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) has become a widely used imaging modality in the past decade in both human studies and animal models. Epilepsy presents unique challenges for neuroimaging due to subject movement during seizures, and the need to correlate the timing of often unpredictable seizure events with fMRI data acquisition. These challenges can readily be overcome in animal models of epilepsy. Animal models also provide an opportunity to investigate the fundamental relationships between fMRI signals and brain electrical activity through invasive studies not possible in humans. fMRI studies in animal models of epilepsy can enable us to correctly interpret fMRI signal increases and decreases in human studies, ultimately elucidating specific networks that will be targeted for improved treatment of epilepsy.
在过去十年中,功能磁共振成像(fMRI)已成为人类研究和动物模型中广泛使用的成像方式。由于癫痫发作期间受试者会移动,且需要将往往不可预测的癫痫发作事件的时间与fMRI数据采集相关联,因此癫痫给神经成像带来了独特的挑战。在癫痫动物模型中,这些挑战很容易克服。动物模型还提供了一个机会,通过人类无法进行的侵入性研究来探究fMRI信号与脑电活动之间的基本关系。癫痫动物模型中的fMRI研究能够使我们正确解释人类研究中fMRI信号的增加和减少,最终阐明将作为改善癫痫治疗靶点的特定网络。