| Literature DB >> 25999812 |
Julius H Bourke1, Matthew B Wall2.
Abstract
Pharmacological Magnetic Resonance Imaging (phMRI) is a variant of conventional MRI that adds pharmacological manipulations in order to study the effects of drugs, or uses pharmacological probes to investigate basic or applied (e.g., clinical) neuroscience questions. Issues that may confound the interpretation of results from various types of phMRI studies are briefly discussed, and a set of methodological strategies that can mitigate these problems are described. These include strategies that can be employed at every stage of investigation, from study design to interpretation of resulting data, and additional techniques suited for use with clinical populations are also featured. Pharmacological MRI is a challenging area of research that has both significant advantages and formidable difficulties, however with due consideration and use of these strategies many of the key obstacles can be overcome.Entities:
Keywords: cognitive neuroscience; methodology; neuroscience; phMRI; pharmaco fMRI; pharmocological MRI; phfMRI; psychopharmacology
Year: 2015 PMID: 25999812 PMCID: PMC4423340 DOI: 10.3389/fnins.2015.00167
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Neurosci ISSN: 1662-453X Impact factor: 4.677
Figure 1Schematics representing different kinds of phMRI studies. (A) The aims of phMRI (vertical axis) can be divided into “challenge” studies aimed more at drug development (often using novel compounds, and occurring in early-phase clinical trials, using healthy volunteers), and “activation” studies that can be classed as experimental medicine (more often using an established/marketed compound, and may use clinical samples). Similarly the methods (horizontal axis) can be divided into those focused on “standard” task-based fMRI, and those using non-task methods (resting-state fMRI, ASL, or other MRI contrasts). (B) A schematic of a typical “challenge” study focusing on drug development. (C) A schematic of a typical “activation” or experimental medicine study. NT, Neurotransmitter; fMRI, functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging; BOLD, Blood Oxygen Level Dependent; ASL, Arterial Spin Labeling.
Figure 2Methodological considerations in phMRI studies illustrated in a proposed timeline and considering both “challenge” studies of novel agents and “activation” studies of established agents deployed for the investigation of task paradigms and disease states. NT, Neurotransmiter; PK, pharmacokinetic; ASL, Arterial Spin Labelling; ROI, Region Of Interest.