Zhao Fuqiang, Zhao Tiejun, Zhou Lei, Wu Qiulin, Hu Xiaoping
Wallace H. Coulter Department of Biomedical Engineering, Georgia Institute of Technology and Emory University, 101 Woodruff Circle, Suite 2001, Atlanta, GA 30322, USA.
Neuroimage. 2008 Jan 1;39(1):248-60. doi: 10.1016/j.neuroimage.2007.07.063. Epub 2007 Aug 22.
Functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) in anesthetized-animals is critical in studying the mechanisms of fMRI and investigating animal models of various diseases. Medetomidine was recently introduced for independent anesthesia for longitudinal (survival) fMRI studies in rats. Since stimulation-induced fMRI signal is anesthesia-dependent and its characteristics in rats under medetomidine are not fully elucidated, the blood oxygenation level dependent (BOLD) fMRI response to electrical forepaw stimulation under medetomidine was systematically investigated at 9.4 T. Robust activations in contralateral primary somatosensory cortex (SI) and thalamus were observed and peaked at the stimulus frequency of 9 Hz. The response in SI saturates at the stimulus strength of 4 mA while that in thalamus monotonically increases. In addition to fMRI data acquired with the forepaw stimulation, data were also acquired during the resting-state to investigate the synchronization of low frequency fluctuations (LFF) in the BOLD signal (<0.08 Hz) in different brain regions. LFF during resting-state have been observed to be synchronized between functionally related brain regions in human subjects while its origin is not fully understood. LFF have not been extensively studied or widely reported in anesthetized-animals. In our data, synchronized LFF of BOLD signals are found in clustered, bilaterally symmetric regions, including SI and caudate-putamen and the magnitude of the LFF is approximately 1.5%, comparable to the stimulation-induced BOLD signals. Similar to resting-state data reported in human subjects, LFF in rats under medetomidine likely reflect functional connectivity of these brain regions.
在麻醉动物中进行功能磁共振成像(fMRI)对于研究fMRI机制和研究各种疾病的动物模型至关重要。美托咪定最近被引入用于大鼠纵向(存活)fMRI研究的独立麻醉。由于刺激诱导的fMRI信号依赖于麻醉,且其在美托咪定作用下大鼠体内的特征尚未完全阐明,因此在9.4T磁场下系统地研究了美托咪定作用下大鼠对电刺激前爪的血氧水平依赖(BOLD)fMRI反应。观察到对侧初级体感皮层(SI)和丘脑有强烈激活,且在9Hz刺激频率时达到峰值。SI中的反应在4mA刺激强度时达到饱和,而丘脑中的反应则单调增加。除了通过前爪刺激获取的fMRI数据外,还在静息状态下获取了数据,以研究不同脑区BOLD信号中低频波动(LFF,<0.08Hz)的同步情况。在人类受试者中,静息状态下的LFF已被观察到在功能相关的脑区之间是同步的,但其起源尚未完全了解。在麻醉动物中,LFF尚未得到广泛研究或广泛报道。在我们的数据中,在包括SI和尾状核 - 壳核在内的成簇、双侧对称区域中发现了BOLD信号的同步LFF,LFF的幅度约为1.5%,与刺激诱导的BOLD信号相当。与人类受试者报道的静息状态数据相似,美托咪定作用下大鼠的LFF可能反映了这些脑区的功能连接性。