Weldon School of Biomedical Engineering, Purdue University, West Lafayette, Indiana.
Institute of Electrical Engineering, Yanshan University, Qinhuangdao, China.
J Neurosci Res. 2019 Apr;97(4):456-466. doi: 10.1002/jnr.24360. Epub 2018 Nov 29.
The blood oxygen level-dependent (BOLD) signal in functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) measures neuronal activation indirectly. Previous studies have found aperiodic, systemic low-frequency oscillations (sLFOs, ~0.1 Hz) in BOLD signals from resting state (RS) fMRI, which reflects the non-neuronal cerebral perfusion information. In this study, we investigated the possibility of extracting vascular information from the sLFOs in RS BOLD fMRI, which could provide complementary information to the neuronal activations. Two features of BOLD signals were exploited. First, time delays between the sLFOs of big blood vessels and brain voxels were calculated to determine cerebral circulation times and blood arrival times. Second, voxel-wise standard deviations (SD) of LFOs were calculated to represent the blood densities. We explored those features on the publicly available Myconnectome data set (a 2-year study of an individual subject (Male)), which contains 45 RS scans acquired after the subject had coffee, and 45 coffee-free RS scans, acquired on different days. Our results showed that shorter time delays and smaller SDs were detected in caffeinated scans. This is consistent with the vasoconstriction effects of caffeine, which leads to increased blood flow velocity. We also compared our results with previous findings on neuronal networks from the same data set. Our finding showed that brain regions with the significant vascular effect of caffeine coincide with those with a significant neuronal effect, indicating close interaction. This study provides methods to assess the physiological information from RS fMRI. Together with the neuronal information, we can study simultaneously the underlying correlations and interactions between vascular and neuronal networks, especially in pharmacological studies.
血氧水平依赖(BOLD)信号在功能磁共振成像(fMRI)中间接测量神经元激活。先前的研究在静息态 fMRI 的 BOLD 信号中发现了周期性的、系统性的低频振荡(sLFO,~0.1 Hz),反映了非神经元的脑灌注信息。在这项研究中,我们研究了从静息态 fMRI 的 sLFO 中提取血管信息的可能性,这可以为神经元激活提供补充信息。利用了 BOLD 信号的两个特征。首先,计算了大动脉和脑体素之间的 sLFO 时间延迟,以确定脑循环时间和血液到达时间。其次,计算了 LFO 的体素标准差(SD),以表示血液密度。我们在公开可用的 Myconnectome 数据集(对一个个体(男性)进行的为期 2 年的研究)上探索了这些特征,该数据集包含了受试者喝咖啡后的 45 个静息态扫描和 45 个无咖啡的静息态扫描,这些扫描是在不同的日子采集的。我们的结果表明,在喝咖啡的扫描中检测到较短的时间延迟和较小的 SD。这与咖啡因的血管收缩作用一致,导致血流速度增加。我们还将我们的结果与来自同一数据集的神经元网络的先前发现进行了比较。我们的发现表明,咖啡因对血管有显著影响的脑区与神经元有显著影响的脑区重合,表明存在密切的相互作用。这项研究提供了从静息态 fMRI 评估生理信息的方法。结合神经元信息,我们可以同时研究血管和神经元网络之间的潜在相关性和相互作用,特别是在药理学研究中。