| Literature DB >> 20592951 |
Michael D Fox1, Michael Greicius.
Abstract
During resting conditions the brain remains functionally and metabolically active. One manifestation of this activity that has become an important research tool is spontaneous fluctuations in the blood oxygen level-dependent (BOLD) signal of functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI). The identification of correlation patterns in these spontaneous fluctuations has been termed resting state functional connectivity (fcMRI) and has the potential to greatly increase the translation of fMRI into clinical care. In this article we review the advantages of the resting state signal for clinical applications including detailed discussion of signal to noise considerations. We include guidelines for performing resting state research on clinical populations, outline the different areas for clinical application, and identify important barriers to be addressed to facilitate the translation of resting state fcMRI into the clinical realm.Entities:
Keywords: brain; fMRI; fcMRI; intrinsic activity; neurological disease; psychiatric disease; spontaneous activity
Year: 2010 PMID: 20592951 PMCID: PMC2893721 DOI: 10.3389/fnsys.2010.00019
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Syst Neurosci ISSN: 1662-5137
Figure 1Resting state functional connectivity reveals correlations and anticorrelations with the default mode network. Correlations between a seed region in the posterior cingulate/precuneus (PCC) and all other voxels in the brain for a single subject during resting fixation. Both correlations (positive values) and anticorrelations (negative values) are shown, thresholded at R = 0.3. The time course for a single run is shown for the seed region (PCC, yellow), a region positively correlated with this seed region in the medial prefrontal cortex (MPF, orange), and a region negatively correlated with the seed region in the intraparietal sulcus (IPS, blue). Reproduced with permission from (Fox et al., 2005).
Figure 2Signal to noise features of spontaneous and task evoked activity. (A) fMRI time course from the left somatomotor cortex (LMC) during a single run when the subject pressed the button once with his right hand. Due to poor signal to noise, it is impossible to identify the task-related activity. (B) Comparison of the LMC with the right somatomotor cortex (RMC) shows that much of the noise is ongoing spontaneous activity correlated within the somatomotor system. (C) After subtracting the RMC from the LMC, the task-related modulation from the individual button press is evident (orange arrow). The LMC and RMC regions of interest are displayed for convenience on the inset map. Data taken from (Fox et al., 2006b).
Group differences in resting state fcMRI patterns observed in various brain diseases or conditions.
| Disease/condition | References | Findings |
|---|---|---|
| Alzheimer's | (Li et al., | Decreased correlations within the DMN including hippocampi, decreased anticorrelations with the DMN, and reduced local connectivity as reflected in clustering coefficients |
| PIB positive | (Hedden et al., | Decreased correlations within the DMN |
| Mild cognitive impairment | (Li et al., | Decreased correlations within the DMN and decreased anticorrelations with the DMN. |
| Fronto-temporal dementia | (Seeley et al., | Decreased correlations within the salience network |
| Healthy aging | (Andrews-Hanna et al., | Decreased correlations within the DMN |
| Multiple sclerosis | (Lowe et al., | Decreased correlations within the somatomotor network |
| ALS | (Mohammadi et al., | Decreased connectivity within the DMN and within the somatomotor network (esp. premotor cortex) |
| Depression | (Anand et al., | Variable: Decreased corticolimbic connectivity (esp. with dorsal anterior cingulate), increased connectivity within the DMN (esp. subgenual prefrontal cortex), decreased connectivity between DMN and caudate |
| Bipolar | (Anand et al., | Decreased corticolimbic connectivity |
| PTSD | (Bluhm et al., | Decreased connectivity within the DMN |
| Schizophrenia | (Liang et al., | Variable: Decreased or increased correlations within the DMN. Decreased, increased or unchanged correlations and anticorrelations between the DMN and other systems. |
| Schizophrenia 1° relatives | (Whitfield-Gabrieli et al., | Increased connectivity within the DMN |
| ADHD | (Zhu et al., | Variable: reduced connectivity within the DMN, reduced anticorrelations with the DMN, increased connectivity in the salience network |
| Autism | (Cherkassky et al., | Decreased connectivity within the DMN (although hippocampus is variable and connectivity may be increased in younger patients) |
| Tourette syndrome | (Church et al., | Delayed maturation of task-control and cingulo-opercular networks |
| Epilepsy | (Waites et al., | Variable: decreased connectivity in multiple networks including the medial temporal lobe, decreased connectivity within the DMN (esp. in patients with generalized seizures) |
| Blindness | (Liu et al., | Decreased connectivity within the visual cortices and between visual cortices and other sensory and multimodal regions |
| Chronic pain | (Greicius et al., | Variable: Increased/decreased connectivity within the salience network, decreased connectivity in attention networks |
| Neglect | (He et al., | Decreased connectivity within the dorsal and ventral attention networks |
| Coma/vegetative state | (Boly et al., | Progressively decreased DMN connectivity with progressive states of impaired consciousness |
| Generalized anxiety disorder | (Etkin et al., | increased connectivity between amygdala and frontoparietal control network and decreased connectivity between amygdala and salience network |
DMN = default mode network including regions in the posterior cingulate/precuneus, lateral parietal cortex, medial temporal lobes, and medial prefrontal cortex (see Figure ). Salience network: includes regions in the dorsal anterior cingulate and bilateral fronto/insular cortices; dACC = dorsal anterior cingulated cortex; PIB = Pittsburg compound B, a marker of amyloid plaque accumulation in the brain. PTSD = post-traumatic stress disorder; ALS = amyotrophic lateral sclerosis; ADHD = attention deficit hyperactivity disorder. Note: some references (Greicius et al., .
Figure 3Moving towards resting state abnormalities as a diagnostic marker in Alzheimers: Using parameters derived from resting state functional connectivity and choosing an appropriate threshold one can show good segregation between patients with Alzheimers disease (AD) and healthy elderly (A). Instead of picking just one threshold, receiver operating characteristic (ROC) curves can show the sensitivity and specificity at several different thresholds (B,C). Below each figure are the sensitivity and specificity values obtained by choosing the ideal threshold to segregate the populations in each study. Adapted with permission from (Li et al., 2002; Greicius et al., 2004; Supekar et al., 2008).
Figure 4Resting state fcMRI in pre-operative brain mapping: (A) Structural MRI scan showing a mass in the right frontal cortex. Green circle represents the location of ipsilateral hand response to intra-operative cortical stimulation. (B) Task-related mapping showing activity within the sensorimotor network but also small responses in parietal cortex that are seemingly unrelated to motor function or sensation. (C) Resting-state correlation mapping showing that the sensorimotor network is largely unaffected by the tumor anterior to the central sulcus. Seed region is shown (blue circle). All images are displayed left-on-left. Adapted with permission from (Zhang et al., 2009a).
Guidelines for studies of clinical populations with resting state fcMRI.
| (1) |
| (2) |
| (3) Correlation with clinical variables whenever possible |
| (4) Stringent correction for multiple comparisons |
| (5) An analysis of movement in patients and control subjects |
| (6) An analysis of the differential impact of pre-processing in patients and control subjects |
| (7) A discussion of how current findings relate to prior fcMRI findings |