Section on Functional Imaging Methods, and the Functional MRI Core Facility, National Institute of Mental Health, USA.
Neuroimage. 2012 Aug 15;62(2):620-31. doi: 10.1016/j.neuroimage.2011.10.044. Epub 2011 Oct 20.
In 1991, the Biophysics Research Institute at the Medical College of Wisconsin was among the first groups to develop functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging (fMRI). Our story is unique on a few levels: We didn't have knowledge of the ability to image human brain activation with MRI using blood oxygenation dependent (BOLD) contrast until early August of 1991 when we attended the Society for Magnetic Resonance in Medicine (SMRM) meeting in San Francisco, yet we produced our first BOLD-based maps of motor cortex activation about a month later. The effort started with two graduate students, Eric Wong and myself. Only a few days prior to that extremely important SMRM meeting, we had developed human echo planar imaging (EPI) capability in-house. Wong designed, built, and interfaced a head gradient coil made out of sewer pipe, wire, and epoxy to a standard GE 1.5T MRI scanner. Also, a few months prior to building this human head gradient coil he developed the EPI pulse sequences and image reconstruction. All of these efforts were towards a different goal--for demonstration of Wong's novel approach to perfusion imaging in the human brain. Following SMRM, where a plenary lecture by Tom Brady from MGH opened our eyes to human brain activation imaging using BOLD contrast, and where we learned that EPI was extremely helpful if not critical to its success, we worked quickly to achieve our first results on September 14, 1991. The story is also unique in that Jim Hyde had set up the Biophysics Research Institute to be optimal for just this type of rapidly advancing basic technology research. It was well equipped for hardware development, had open and dynamic collaborative relationships with other departments, hospitals on campus, and GE, and had a relatively flat hierarchy and relaxed, flexible, collegial atmosphere internally. Since these first brain activation results, MCW Biophysics has continued to be at the forefront of functional MRI innovation, having helped to pioneer real time fMRI, high-resolution fMRI, and functional connectivity mapping.
1991 年,威斯康星医学院的生物物理研究所是最早开发功能磁共振成像(fMRI)的小组之一。我们的故事在几个方面是独一无二的:直到 1991 年 8 月初我们参加旧金山的医学磁共振学会(SMRM)会议时,我们才了解到使用血氧水平依赖(BOLD)对比通过 MRI 对人脑激活进行成像的能力,而就在一个月后,我们生成了第一个基于 BOLD 的运动皮层激活图。这项工作始于两位研究生,Eric Wong 和我自己。在那次非常重要的 SMRM 会议之前的几天,我们已经在内部开发了人体回波平面成像(EPI)功能。Wong 设计、构建并将由污水管、电线和环氧树脂制成的头梯度线圈与标准的 GE 1.5T MRI 扫描仪接口。此外,在构建这个人头梯度线圈的几个月前,他开发了 EPI 脉冲序列和图像重建。所有这些努力都是为了一个不同的目标——展示 Wong 在人类大脑灌注成像方面的新方法。在 SMRM 会议之后,MGH 的 Tom Brady 的一个全会演讲让我们大开眼界,了解到使用 BOLD 对比进行人脑激活成像,并且我们了解到 EPI 对其成功非常有帮助,如果不是关键的话,我们于 1991 年 9 月 14 日迅速取得了第一个结果。这个故事的独特之处还在于,Jim Hyde 建立了生物物理研究所,使其非常适合这种快速发展的基础技术研究。它非常适合硬件开发,与校内其他部门、医院和 GE 建立了开放和动态的合作关系,并且内部有一个相对扁平的层次结构和轻松、灵活、友善的氛围。自这些最初的大脑激活结果以来,MCW 生物物理研究所一直处于功能磁共振成像创新的前沿,帮助开创了实时 fMRI、高分辨率 fMRI 和功能连接映射。