Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
3075182 NeuroImage: Clinical 2015 7 Pages PDF
Abstract

•Energy phosphates and functional connectivity are markers of physiological conditions..•We first apply rsfMRI & 31P CSI to assess correlation between the two markers.•Distinctive correlations between them in normal controls and patients with depression

Impaired brain energy metabolism is among the leading hypotheses in the pathogenesis of affective disorders and linking energy phosphates with states of tissue-function activity is a novel and non-invasive approach to differentiate healthy from unhealthy states. Resting state functional MRI (fMRI) has been established as an important tool for mapping cerebral regional activity and phosphorous chemical shift imaging (31P CSI) has been applied to measure levels of energy phosphates and phospholipids non-invasively in order to gain insight into the possible etiology of affective disorders. This is an initial attempt to identify the existence of a correlation between regional energy phosphates and connectivity at nodes of the posterior default mode network (DMN). Resting state fMRI in conjunction with 31P 2D CSI was applied to 11 healthy controls and 11 depressed patients at 3 T. We found that differences between the two groups exist in correlation of lateral posterior parietal cortex functional connectivity and regional Pi/PCr. Results of this study indicate that resting-state-fMRI-guided 31P CSI can provide new insight into depression via regional energy phosphates and functional connectivity.

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Life Sciences Neuroscience Biological Psychiatry
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