Université Paris Descartes Sorbonne Paris Cité, Centre de Psychiatrie et Neurosciences, INSERM S894, Centre Hospitalier Sainte-Anne, Paris, France.
1A Allée des bois de Gagny, 93340 Le Raincy, France.
Neuroimage. 2014 Nov 1;101:138-49. doi: 10.1016/j.neuroimage.2014.06.063. Epub 2014 Jul 6.
Functional ultrasound imaging is a method recently developed to assess brain activity via hemodynamics in rodents. Doppler ultrasound signals allow the measurement of cerebral blood volume (CBV) and red blood cells' (RBCs') velocity in small vessels. However, this technique originally requires performing a large craniotomy that limits its use to acute experiments only. Moreover, a detailed description of the hemodynamic changes that underlie functional ultrasound imaging has not been described but is essential for a better interpretation of neuroimaging data. To overcome the limitation of the craniotomy, we developed a dedicated thinned skull surgery for chronic imaging. This procedure did not induce brain inflammation nor neuronal death as confirmed by immunostaining. We successfully acquired both high-resolution images of the microvasculature and functional movies of the brain hemodynamics on the same animal at 0, 2, and 7 days without loss of quality. Then, we investigated the spatiotemporal evolution of the CBV hemodynamic response function (HRF) in response to sensory-evoked electrical stimulus (1 mA) ranging from 1 (200 μs) to 25 pulses (5s). Our results indicate that CBV HRF parameters such as the peak amplitude, the time to peak, the full width at half-maximum and the spatial extent of the activated area increase with stimulus duration. Functional ultrasound imaging was sensitive enough to detect hemodynamic responses evoked by only a single pulse stimulus. We also observed that the RBC velocity during activation could be separated in two distinct speed ranges with the fastest velocities located in the upper part of the cortex and slower velocities in deeper layers. For the first time, functional ultrasound imaging demonstrates its potential to image brain activity chronically in small animals and offers new insights into the spatiotemporal evolution of cerebral hemodynamics.
功能超声成像是一种最近开发的方法,用于通过啮齿动物的血液动力学评估大脑活动。多普勒超声信号允许测量脑血容量 (CBV) 和红细胞 (RBC) 在小血管中的速度。然而,这项技术最初需要进行大的开颅手术,这限制了它仅用于急性实验。此外,对于功能超声成像所依据的血液动力学变化的详细描述尚未描述,但对于神经影像学数据的更好解释是必不可少的。为了克服开颅术的限制,我们开发了一种专门用于慢性成像的变薄颅骨手术。该程序不会引起脑炎症或神经元死亡,免疫染色证实了这一点。我们成功地在同一只动物上获得了微血管的高分辨率图像和大脑血液动力学的功能电影,在 0、2 和 7 天内没有质量损失。然后,我们研究了 CBV 血液动力学响应功能 (HRF) 的时空演化,以响应从 1 (200 μs) 到 25 个脉冲 (5s) 的感觉诱发电刺激 (1 mA)。我们的结果表明,CBV HRF 参数,如峰值幅度、峰值时间、半最大值全宽和激活区域的空间范围,随着刺激持续时间的增加而增加。功能超声成像足够灵敏,可以检测到单个脉冲刺激引起的血液动力学反应。我们还观察到,在激活过程中 RBC 速度可以分为两个不同的速度范围,最快的速度位于皮质的上部分,较慢的速度位于更深的层。功能超声成像首次证明了其在小动物中进行慢性大脑活动成像的潜力,并为大脑血液动力学的时空演化提供了新的见解。