Literature DB >> 15973353

A multiparametric assessment of oxygen efflux from the brain.

Peter Hermán1, Hubert K F Trübel, Fahmeed Hyder.   

Abstract

A quantitative understanding of unidirectional versus net extraction of oxygen in the brain is required because an important factor in calculating oxidative metabolism by calibrated functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) as well as oxygen inhalation methods of positron emission tomography (15O2-PET) and nuclear magnetic resonance (17O2-NMR)) is the degree of oxygen efflux from the brain back into the blood. Because mechanisms of oxygen transport from blood to brain are dependent on cerebral metabolic rate of oxygen consumption (CMRO2), cerebral blood flow (CBF), and oxygen partial pressure (pO2) values in intravascular (Piv) and extravascular (Pev) compartments, we implemented multimodal measurements of these parameters into a compartmental model of oxygen transport and metabolism (i.e., hemoglobin-bound oxygen, oxygen dissolved in plasma and tissue spaces, oxygen metabolized in the mitochondria). In the alpha-chloralose anesthetized rat brain, we used magnetic resonance (7.0 T) and fluorescence quenching methods to measure CMRO2 (2.5+/-1.0 micromol/g min), CBF (0.7+/-0.2 mL/g min), Piv (74+/-10 mm Hg), and Pev (16+/-5 mm Hg) to estimate the degree of oxygen efflux from the brain. In the axially distributed compartmental model, oxygen molecules in blood had two possible fates: enter the tissue space or remain in the same compartment; while in tissue there were three possible fates: enter the blood or the mitochondrial space, or remain in the same compartment. The multiparametric results indicate that the probability of unmetabolized (i.e., dissolved) oxygen molecules reentering the blood from the tissue is negligible and thus its inclusion may unnecessarily complicate calculations of CMRO2 for 15O-PET, 17O-NMR, and calibrated fMRI methods.

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Year:  2006        PMID: 15973353     DOI: 10.1038/sj.jcbfm.9600165

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Cereb Blood Flow Metab        ISSN: 0271-678X            Impact factor:   6.200


  21 in total

1.  Indication of BOLD-specific venous flow-volume changes from precisely controlled hyperoxic vs. hypercapnic calibration.

Authors:  Clarisse I Mark; G Bruce Pike
Journal:  J Cereb Blood Flow Metab       Date:  2011-12-14       Impact factor: 6.200

Review 2.  Role of ongoing, intrinsic activity of neuronal populations for quantitative neuroimaging of functional magnetic resonance imaging-based networks.

Authors:  Fahmeed Hyder; Peter Herman; Basavaraju G Sanganahalli; Daniel Coman; Hal Blumenfeld; Douglas L Rothman
Journal:  Brain Connect       Date:  2011

3.  A multicompartment vascular model for inferring baseline and functional changes in cerebral oxygen metabolism and arterial dilation.

Authors:  Theodore J Huppert; Monica S Allen; Heval Benav; Phill B Jones; David A Boas
Journal:  J Cereb Blood Flow Metab       Date:  2007-01-03       Impact factor: 6.200

4.  Dynamics of changes in blood flow, volume, and oxygenation: implications for dynamic functional magnetic resonance imaging calibration.

Authors:  Ikuhiro Kida; Douglas L Rothman; Fahmeed Hyder
Journal:  J Cereb Blood Flow Metab       Date:  2006-10-11       Impact factor: 6.200

5.  A vascular anatomical network model of the spatio-temporal response to brain activation.

Authors:  David A Boas; Stephanie R Jones; Anna Devor; Theodore J Huppert; Anders M Dale
Journal:  Neuroimage       Date:  2008-01-15       Impact factor: 6.556

6.  Direct estimation of evoked hemoglobin changes by multimodality fusion imaging.

Authors:  Theodore J Huppert; Solomon G Diamond; David A Boas
Journal:  J Biomed Opt       Date:  2008 Sep-Oct       Impact factor: 3.170

7.  Two-photon microscopy measurement of cerebral metabolic rate of oxygen using periarteriolar oxygen concentration gradients.

Authors:  Sava Sakadžić; Mohammad A Yaseen; Rajeshwer Jaswal; Emmanuel Roussakis; Anders M Dale; Richard B Buxton; Sergei A Vinogradov; David A Boas; Anna Devor
Journal:  Neurophotonics       Date:  2016-10-17       Impact factor: 3.593

8.  Oxygen advection and diffusion in a three- dimensional vascular anatomical network.

Authors:  Qianqian Fang; Sava Sakadzić; Lana Ruvinskaya; Anna Devor; Anders M Dale; David A Boas
Journal:  Opt Express       Date:  2008-10-27       Impact factor: 3.894

9.  Oxidative neuroenergetics in event-related paradigms.

Authors:  Basavaraju G Sanganahalli; Peter Herman; Hal Blumenfeld; Fahmeed Hyder
Journal:  J Neurosci       Date:  2009-02-11       Impact factor: 6.167

10.  A model for transient oxygen delivery in cerebral cortex.

Authors:  David Ress; Jeffrey K Thompson; Bas Rokers; Reswanul K Khan; Alexander C Huk
Journal:  Front Neuroenergetics       Date:  2009-06-29
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