Keyword search (3,168 papers available)


High resolution atlas of the venous brain vasculature from 7 T quantitative susceptibility maps.

Author(s): Huck J, Wanner Y, Fan AP, Jäger AT, Grahl S, Schneider U, Villringer A, Steele CJ, Tardif CL, Bazin PL, Gauthier CJ

Brain Struct Funct. 2019 Jul 05;: Authors: Huck J, Wanner Y, Fan AP, Jäger AT, Grahl S, Schneider U, Villringer A, Steele CJ, Tardif CL, Bazin PL, Gauthier CJ

Article GUID: 31278570

Advanced MRI techniques to improve our understanding of experience-induced neuroplasticity.

Author(s): Tardif CL, Gauthier CJ, Steele CJ, Bazin PL, Schäfer A, Schaefer A, Turner R, Villringer A

Neuroimage. 2016 05 01;131:55-72 Authors: Tardif CL, Gauthier CJ, Steele CJ, Bazin PL, Schäfer A, Schaefer A, Turner R, Villringer A

Article GUID: 26318050

Elevated brain oxygen extraction fraction measured by MRI susceptibility relates to perfusion status in acute ischemic stroke.

Author(s): Fan AP, Khalil AA, Fiebach JB, Zaharchuk G, Villringer A, Villringer K, Gauthier CJ

J Cereb Blood Flow Metab. 2019 Feb 07;:271678X19827944 Authors: Fan AP, Khalil AA, Fiebach JB, Zaharchuk G, Villringer A, Villringer K, Gauthier CJ

Article GUID: 30732551

Kinematic profiles suggest differential control processes involved in bilateral in-phase and anti-phase movements.

Author(s): Shih PC, Steele CJ, Nikulin V, Villringer A, Sehm B

Sci Rep. 2019 Mar 01;9(1):3273 Authors: Shih PC, Steele CJ, Nikulin V, Villringer A, Sehm B

Article GUID: 30824858

Investigation of the confounding effects of vasculature and metabolism on computational anatomy studies.

Author(s): Tardif CL, Steele CJ, Lampe L, Bazin PL, Ragert P, Villringer A, Gauthier CJ

Neuroimage. 2017 04 01;149:233-243 Authors: Tardif CL, Steele CJ, Lampe L, Bazin PL, Ragert P, Villringer A, Gauthier CJ

Article GUID: 28159689


Title:Investigation of the confounding effects of vasculature and metabolism on computational anatomy studies.
Authors:Tardif CLSteele CJLampe LBazin PLRagert PVillringer AGauthier CJ
Link:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28159689?dopt=Abstract
Category:Neuroimage
PMID:28159689
Dept Affiliation: PERFORM
1 Douglas Mental Health University Institute, McGill University, Montreal, Canada.
2 Douglas Mental Health University Institute, McGill University, Montreal, Canada; Max Planck Institute for Human Cognitive and Brain Sciences, Leipzig, Germany.
3 Max Planck Institute for Human Cognitive and Brain Sciences, Leipzig, Germany.
4 University of Leipzig, Department of Sport Science, Leipzig, Germany.
5 Max Planck Institute for Human Cognitive and Brain Sciences, Leipzig, Germany; Department of Cognitive Neurology, University Hospital, Leipzig, Germany; Mind & Brain Institute, Berlin School of Mind and Brain, Charité and Humboldt-University, Berlin, Germany.
6 Concordia University, Department of Physics, PERFORM Centre, Montreal, Canada. Electronic address: claudine.gauthier@concordia.ca.

Description:

Investigation of the confounding effects of vasculature and metabolism on computational anatomy studies.

Neuroimage. 2017 04 01;149:233-243

Authors: Tardif CL, Steele CJ, Lampe L, Bazin PL, Ragert P, Villringer A, Gauthier CJ

Abstract

Computational anatomy studies typically use T1-weighted magnetic resonance imaging contrast to look at local differences in cortical thickness or grey matter volume across time or subjects. This type of analysis is a powerful and non-invasive tool to probe anatomical changes associated with neurodevelopment, aging, disease or experience-induced plasticity. However, these comparisons could suffer from biases arising from vascular and metabolic subject- or time-dependent differences. Differences in blood flow and volume could be caused by vasodilation or differences in vascular density, and result in a larger signal contribution of the blood compartment within grey matter voxels. Metabolic changes could lead to differences in dissolved oxygen in brain tissue, leading to T1 shortening. Here, we analyze T1 maps and T1-weighted images acquired during different breathing conditions (ambient air, hypercapnia (increased CO2) and hyperoxia (increased O2)) to evaluate the effect size that can be expected from changes in blood flow, volume and dissolved O2 concentration in computational anatomy studies. Results show that increased blood volume from vasodilation during hypercapnia is associated with an overestimation of cortical thickness (1.85%) and grey matter volume (3.32%), and that both changes in O2 concentration and blood volume lead to changes in the T1 value of tissue. These results should be taken into consideration when interpreting existing morphometry studies and in future study design. Furthermore, this study highlights the overlap in structural and physiological MRI, which are conventionally interpreted as two independent modalities.

PMID: 28159689 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]