| Literature DB >> 28779069 |
Marion Imbault1, Dorian Chauvet2,3, Jean-Luc Gennisson4, Laurent Capelle2, Mickael Tanter4.
Abstract
The functional mapping of brain activity is essential to perform optimal glioma surgery and to minimize the risk of postoperative deficits. We introduce a new, portable neuroimaging modality of the human brain based on functional ultrasound (fUS) for deep functional cortical mapping. Using plane-wave transmissions at an ultrafast frame rate (1 kHz), fUS is performed during surgery to measure transient changes in cerebral blood volume with a high spatiotemporal resolution (250 µm, 1 ms). fUS identifies, maps and differentiates regions of brain activation during task-evoked cortical responses within the depth of a sulcus in both awake and anaesthetized patients.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28779069 PMCID: PMC5544759 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-017-06474-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Intraoperative fUS imaging of “mouth sensitive”-evoked brain activation in one patient. (a) Superficial ESM activation map; the letters show the tumour position, numbers from 1 to 10 represent the motor cortex and numbers from 11 to 20 represent the somatosensory cortex. (b) The probe position on the cortex (red rectangle) on the “mouth sensory” ESM tag 13. The drawing of the brain was created by Alexandre Dizeux. (c) Power Doppler fUS images are acquired every 3 s when the awake patient is performing the corresponding task (“mouth opening and closing”). This motor task was chosen to stimulate a sensitive area because the patient’s lips touching each other is a strong sensitive stimulation. The task pattern (red line) consisted of six blocks of reference conditions (OFF) and five blocks of tasks (ON). The cerebral blood volume (CBV) increase is plotted in a percentage relative to the baseline CBV. Variations in blood volume during ultrasound acquisitions are presented in Supplementary Video 1 for this task and this patient. (d) The in-depth activation map obtained for the task “mouth opening and closing” when the probe is on the “mouth sensory” ESM tag 13.
Figure 2Comparison between the intraoperative functional imaging of the motor and the somatosensory cortices. (a) Superficial ESM activation map. Numbers from 1 to 10 represent the motor cortex and numbers from 11 to 20 represent the somatosensory cortex. (b) The probe position on the brain cortex (red rectangle). The probe is across the “2–5 fingers motor” (ESM tag 2) and the “4–5 fingers sensory” (ESM tag 14) for both activation maps presented in (c) and (d). The drawing of the brain was created by Alexandre Dizeux. (c) The in-depth activation map obtained for the task “2–5 fingers motor”. The correlation map illustrates that both the motor (ESM tag 2) and the somatosensory (ESM tag 14) cortices are implicated in the task. (d) The in-depth activation map obtained for the task “4–5 fingers sensory”. The correlation map illustrates that only the somatosensory cortex (ESM tag 14) is implicated in this task. In (c) and (d), the cerebral blood volume (CBV) increase is plotted in a percentage relative to the baseline CBV for different regions of interest.