Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
6031597 | NeuroImage | 2012 | 7 Pages |
Abstract
Vascular-Space-Occupancy (VASO) fMRI is a non-invasive technique to detect brain activation based on changes in Cerebral Blood Volume (CBV), as opposed to conventional BOLD fMRI, which is based on changes in blood oxygenation. This technique takes advantage of the T1 difference between blood and surrounding tissue, and uses an inversion recovery pulse sequence to null blood signal while maintaining part of the tissue signal. The VASO signal intensity can thus be considered proportional to 1-CBV. When neural activation causes CBV to increase, the VASO signal will show a decrease, allowing the detection of activated regions in the brain. Activation-induced changes in VASO signal, âS/S, are in the order of â1%. Absolute quantification of âCBV requires additional assumptions on baseline CBV and water contents of the parenchyma and blood. The first VASO experiment was conducted approximately 10Â years ago. The original goal of nulling the blood signal was to isolate and measure extravascular BOLD effects, thus a long TE of 50Â ms was used in the inversion recovery experiment. Instead of a positive signal change, a slight decrease in signal was observed, which became more pronounced when TE was shortened to 10Â ms. These findings led to the hypothesis of a CBV signal mechanism and the development of VASO fMRI. Since its discovery, VASO has been validated by comparison with MION-CBV studies in animals and has been used in humans and animals to understand metabolic and hemodynamic changes during brain activation and physiologic challenges. With recent development of more sensitive VASO acquisitions, the availability of arterial-based VASO sequences, and improvement in spatial coverage, this technique is finding its place in neuroscience and clinical studies.
Related Topics
Life Sciences
Neuroscience
Cognitive Neuroscience
Authors
Hanzhang Lu, Peter C.M. van Zijl,