The Neuroimaging Research Group, Brain Sciences Center, Department of Veterans Affairs Health Care System, Minneapolis, Minnesota, United States.
Department of Neuroscience, University of Minnesota Medical School, Minneapolis, Minnesota, United States.
J Neurophysiol. 2024 Oct 1;132(4):1231-1234. doi: 10.1152/jn.00360.2024. Epub 2024 Sep 11.
The blood oxygenation level-dependent (BOLD) activation reflects hemodynamic events mediated by neurovascular coupling. During task performance, the BOLD hemodynamic response in a relevant area is mainly driven by the high levels of synaptic activity (reflected in local field potentials, LFPs) but, in contrast, during a task-free, resting state, the contribution to BOLD of such neural events is small, as expected by the comparatively (to the task state) low level of neural events. Concomitant recording of BOLD and LFP at rest in animal experiments has estimated the neural contribution to BOLD to ∼10%. Such experiments have not been performed in humans. As an approximation, we recorded (in the same subject, = 57 healthy participants) at a task-free, resting state the BOLD signal and, in a different session, the magnetoencephalographic (MEG) signal, which reflects purely neural (synaptic) events. We then calculated the turnover of these signals by computing the successive moment-to-moment difference in the BOLD and MEG time series and retaining the median of the absolute value of the differenced series (BOLD and TMEG, respectively). The correlation between normalized turnovers of BOLD (TBOLD) and turnovers of MEG (TMEG) was = 0.336 ( = 0.113; = 0.011). These results estimate that 11.3% of the variance in TBOLD can be explained by the variance in TMEG. This estimate is close to the aforementioned estimate obtained by direct recordings in animal experiments. Here, we report on a weak positive association between turnovers of blood oxygenation level-dependent (TBOLD) and magnetoencephalographic (TMEG) signals in 57 healthy human subjects in a resting, task-free state. More specifically, we found that the purely neural TMEG accounted for 11.1% of the TBOLD, a percentage remarkably close to that found between resting-state local field potentials (LFPs) and BOLD recorded concurrently in animal experiments.
血氧水平依赖(BOLD)激活反映了神经血管耦合介导的血液动力学事件。在任务执行期间,相关区域的 BOLD 血液动力学反应主要由高水平的突触活动(反映在局部场电位,LFPs 中)驱动,但相反,在无任务的静息状态下,这种神经事件对 BOLD 的贡献很小,这与(与任务状态相比)较低水平的神经事件相吻合。在动物实验中同时记录 BOLD 和 LFP 在静息状态下估计了 BOLD 对神经的贡献约为 10%。在人类中尚未进行此类实验。作为一种近似,我们在无任务的静息状态下(同一受试者,n=57 名健康参与者)记录了 BOLD 信号,并在不同的会议中记录了脑磁图(MEG)信号,该信号反映了纯粹的神经(突触)事件。然后,我们通过计算 BOLD 和 MEG 时间序列的连续逐点差异来计算这些信号的周转率,并保留差异系列的绝对值的中位数(分别为 BOLD 和 TMEG)。归一化 BOLD(TBOLD)周转率和 MEG(TMEG)周转率之间的相关性 r=0.336(p=0.113;n=0.011)。这些结果估计,TBOLD 方差的 11.3%可以由 TMEG 的方差来解释。这一估计与直接在动物实验中记录的上述估计值接近。在这里,我们报告了 57 名健康人类受试者在静息、无任务状态下 BOLD(TBOLD)和脑磁图(TMEG)信号周转率之间的弱正相关。更具体地说,我们发现纯粹的神经 TMEG 占 TBOLD 的 11.1%,这一百分比与动物实验中同时记录的静息状态局部场电位(LFPs)和 BOLD 之间发现的百分比非常接近。