Literature DB >> 20665721

Increasing measurement accuracy of age-related BOLD signal change: minimizing vascular contributions by resting-state-fluctuation-of-amplitude scaling.

Sridhar S Kannurpatti1, Michael A Motes, Bart Rypma, Bharat B Biswal.   

Abstract

In this report we demonstrate a hemodynamic scaling method with resting-state fluctuation of amplitude (RSFA) in healthy adult younger and older subject groups. We show that RSFA correlated with breath hold (BH) responses throughout the brain in groups of younger and older subjects which RSFA and BH performed comparably in accounting for age-related hemodynamic coupling changes, and yielded more veridical estimates of age-related differences in task-related neural activity. BOLD data from younger and older adults performing motor and cognitive tasks were scaled using RSFA and BH related signal changes. Scaling with RSFA and BH reduced the skew of the BOLD response amplitude distribution in each subject and reduced mean BOLD amplitude and variability in both age groups. Statistically significant differences in intrasubject amplitude variation across regions of activated cortex, and intersubject amplitude variation in regions of activated cortex were observed between younger and older subject groups. Intra- and intersubject variability differences were mitigated after scaling. RSFA, though similar to BH in minimizing skew in the unscaled BOLD amplitude distribution, attenuated the neural activity-related BOLD amplitude significantly less than BH. The amplitude and spatial extent of group activation were lower in the older than in the younger group before and after scaling. After accounting for vascular variability differences through scaling, age-related decreases in activation volume were observed during the motor and cognitive tasks. The results suggest that RSFA-scaled data yield age-related neural activity differences during task performance with negligible effects from non-neural (i.e., vascular) sources.
Copyright © 2010 Wiley-Liss, Inc.

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Year:  2010        PMID: 20665721      PMCID: PMC3310892          DOI: 10.1002/hbm.21097

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Hum Brain Mapp        ISSN: 1065-9471            Impact factor:   5.038


  63 in total

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  43 in total

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Review 2.  The declining infrastructure of the aging brain.

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Journal:  Brain Connect       Date:  2011

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Authors:  Cheryl L Grady; Douglas D Garrett
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4.  Alterations of Parenchymal Microstructure, Neuronal Connectivity, and Cerebrovascular Resistance at Adolescence after Mild-to-Moderate Traumatic Brain Injury in Early Development.

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Review 5.  Beyond BOLD: optimizing functional imaging in stroke populations.

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Journal:  Hum Brain Mapp       Date:  2014-12-02       Impact factor: 5.038

6.  Experimental design modulates variance in BOLD activation: The variance design general linear model.

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7.  Age-related differences in memory-encoding fMRI responses after accounting for decline in vascular reactivity.

Authors:  Peiying Liu; Andrew C Hebrank; Karen M Rodrigue; Kristen M Kennedy; Jarren Section; Denise C Park; Hanzhang Lu
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8.  Neural basis of the association between depressive symptoms and memory deficits in nondemented subjects: resting-state fMRI study.

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9.  Measuring vascular reactivity with resting-state blood oxygenation level-dependent (BOLD) signal fluctuations: A potential alternative to the breath-holding challenge?

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10.  Role of mitochondrial calcium uptake homeostasis in resting state fMRI brain networks.

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