Literature DB >> 22333670

The road to functional imaging and ultrahigh fields.

Kâmil Uğurbil1.   

Abstract

The Center for Magnetic Resonance (CMRR) at the University of Minnesota was one of the laboratories where the work that simultaneously and independently introduced functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) of human brain activity was carried out. However, unlike other laboratories pursuing fMRI at the time, our work was performed at 4T magnetic field and coincided with the effort to push human magnetic resonance imaging to field strength significantly beyond 1.5T which was the high-end standard of the time. The human fMRI experiments performed in CMRR were planned between two colleagues who had known each other and had worked together previously in Bell Laboratories, namely Seiji Ogawa and myself, immediately after the Blood Oxygenation Level Dependent (BOLD) contrast was developed by Seiji. We were waiting for our first human system, a 4T system, to arrive in order to attempt at imaging brain activity in the human brain and these were the first experiments we performed on the 4T instrument in CMRR when it became marginally operational. This was a prelude to a subsequent systematic push we initiated for exploiting higher magnetic fields to improve the accuracy and sensitivity of fMRI maps, first going to 9.4T for animal model studies and subsequently developing a 7T human system for the first time. Steady improvements in high field instrumentation and ever expanding armamentarium of image acquisition and engineering solutions to challenges posed by ultrahigh fields have brought fMRI to submillimeter resolution in the whole brain at 7T, the scale necessary to reach cortical columns and laminar differentiation in the whole brain. The solutions that emerged in response to technological challenges posed by 7T also propagated and continues to propagate to lower field clinical systems, a major advantage of the ultrahigh fields effort that is underappreciated. Further improvements at 7T are inevitable. Further translation of these improvements to lower field clinical systems to achieve new capabilities and to magnetic fields significantly higher than 7T to enable human imaging is inescapable.
Copyright © 2012 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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Year:  2012        PMID: 22333670      PMCID: PMC3531996          DOI: 10.1016/j.neuroimage.2012.01.134

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Neuroimage        ISSN: 1053-8119            Impact factor:   6.556


  87 in total

1.  An integrative model for neuronal activity-induced signal changes for gradient and spin echo functional imaging.

Authors:  Kâmil Uludağ; Bernd Müller-Bierl; Kâmil Uğurbil
Journal:  Neuroimage       Date:  2009-05-27       Impact factor: 6.556

2.  Broadband slab selection with B1+ mitigation at 7T via parallel spectral-spatial excitation.

Authors:  Kawin Setsompop; Vijayanand Alagappan; Borjan A Gagoski; Andreas Potthast; Franz Hebrank; Ulrich Fontius; Franz Schmitt; L L Wald; E Adalsteinsson
Journal:  Magn Reson Med       Date:  2009-02       Impact factor: 4.668

3.  Mechanisms underlying decoding at 7 T: ocular dominance columns, broad structures, and macroscopic blood vessels in V1 convey information on the stimulated eye.

Authors:  Amir Shmuel; Denis Chaimow; Guenter Raddatz; Kamil Ugurbil; Essa Yacoub
Journal:  Neuroimage       Date:  2009-08-26       Impact factor: 6.556

4.  In vivo 1H NMR spectroscopy of the human brain at high magnetic fields: metabolite quantification at 4T vs. 7T.

Authors:  Ivan Tkác; Gülin Oz; Gregor Adriany; Kamil Uğurbil; Rolf Gruetter
Journal:  Magn Reson Med       Date:  2009-10       Impact factor: 4.668

5.  T1 weighted brain images at 7 Tesla unbiased for Proton Density, T2* contrast and RF coil receive B1 sensitivity with simultaneous vessel visualization.

Authors:  Pierre-François Van de Moortele; Edwards J Auerbach; Cheryl Olman; Essa Yacoub; Kâmil Uğurbil; Steen Moeller
Journal:  Neuroimage       Date:  2009-02-20       Impact factor: 6.556

6.  Initial results of cardiac imaging at 7 Tesla.

Authors:  C J Snyder; L DelaBarre; G J Metzger; P-F van de Moortele; C Akgun; K Ugurbil; J T Vaughan
Journal:  Magn Reson Med       Date:  2009-03       Impact factor: 4.668

7.  Whole-body imaging at 7T: preliminary results.

Authors:  J Thomas Vaughan; Carl J Snyder; Lance J DelaBarre; Patrick J Bolan; Jinfeng Tian; Lizann Bolinger; Gregor Adriany; Peter Andersen; John Strupp; Kamil Ugurbil
Journal:  Magn Reson Med       Date:  2009-01       Impact factor: 4.668

8.  Short echo spectroscopic imaging of the human brain at 7T using transceiver arrays.

Authors:  N I Avdievich; J W Pan; J M Baehring; D D Spencer; H P Hetherington
Journal:  Magn Reson Med       Date:  2009-07       Impact factor: 4.668

9.  Magnetic field homogenization of the human prefrontal cortex with a set of localized electrical coils.

Authors:  Christoph Juchem; Terence W Nixon; Scott McIntyre; Douglas L Rothman; Robin A de Graaf
Journal:  Magn Reson Med       Date:  2010-01       Impact factor: 4.668

10.  Slice-selective RF pulses for in vivo B1+ inhomogeneity mitigation at 7 tesla using parallel RF excitation with a 16-element coil.

Authors:  Kawin Setsompop; Vijayanand Alagappan; Borjan Gagoski; Thomas Witzel; Jonathan Polimeni; Andreas Potthast; Franz Hebrank; Ulrich Fontius; Franz Schmitt; Lawrence L Wald; Elfar Adalsteinsson
Journal:  Magn Reson Med       Date:  2008-12       Impact factor: 4.668

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  26 in total

1.  Coarse-scale biases for spirals and orientation in human visual cortex.

Authors:  Jeremy Freeman; David J Heeger; Elisha P Merriam
Journal:  J Neurosci       Date:  2013-12-11       Impact factor: 6.167

2.  Quantitative basis for neuroimaging of cortical laminae with calibrated functional MRI.

Authors:  Peter Herman; Basavaraju G Sanganahalli; Hal Blumenfeld; Douglas L Rothman; Fahmeed Hyder
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2013-08-26       Impact factor: 11.205

Review 3.  RF pulse methods for use with surface coils: Frequency-modulated pulses and parallel transmission.

Authors:  Michael Garwood; Kamil Uğurbil
Journal:  J Magn Reson       Date:  2018-04-26       Impact factor: 2.229

4.  Quantitative prediction of radio frequency induced local heating derived from measured magnetic field maps in magnetic resonance imaging: A phantom validation at 7 T.

Authors:  Xiaotong Zhang; Pierre-Francois Van de Moortele; Jiaen Liu; Sebastian Schmitter; Bin He
Journal:  Appl Phys Lett       Date:  2014-12-15       Impact factor: 3.791

5.  From ultrahigh to extreme field magnetic resonance: where physics, biology and medicine meet.

Authors:  Thoralf Niendorf; Markus Barth; Frank Kober; Siegfried Trattnig
Journal:  MAGMA       Date:  2016-06       Impact factor: 2.310

Review 6.  What is feasible with imaging human brain function and connectivity using functional magnetic resonance imaging.

Authors:  Kamil Ugurbil
Journal:  Philos Trans R Soc Lond B Biol Sci       Date:  2016-10-05       Impact factor: 6.237

7.  Measuring renal tissue relaxation times at 7 T.

Authors:  Xiufeng Li; Patrick J Bolan; Kamil Ugurbil; Gregory J Metzger
Journal:  NMR Biomed       Date:  2014-10-23       Impact factor: 4.044

8.  Enhanced phase regression with Savitzky-Golay filtering for high-resolution BOLD fMRI.

Authors:  Robert L Barry; John C Gore
Journal:  Hum Brain Mapp       Date:  2014-01-17       Impact factor: 5.038

Review 9.  Imaging at ultrahigh magnetic fields: History, challenges, and solutions.

Authors:  Kamil Uğurbil
Journal:  Neuroimage       Date:  2017-07-08       Impact factor: 6.556

10.  Impulse response timing differences in BOLD and CBV weighted fMRI.

Authors:  Jacco A de Zwart; Peter van Gelderen; Matthew K Schindler; Pascal Sati; Jiaen Liu; Daniel S Reich; Jeff H Duyn
Journal:  Neuroimage       Date:  2018-07-05       Impact factor: 6.556

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