| Literature DB >> 33958869 |
Narayan Rai1, Maria Mananita Hipolito1, John W VanMeter2, Riya Seth3, Ayokunnumi Adenuga3, Myeshia Shelby4, Magdalena Misiak-Christian5, Charles Nwaokobia3, Kebreten F Manaye5, Thomas O Obisesan6, Evaristus Nwulia1,3.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: This study evaluated human Blood Oxygen Level-Dependent (BOLD) responses in primary and higher-order olfactory regions of older adults, using odor memory and odor identification tasks. The goal was to determine which olfactory and memory regions of interest are more strongly engaged in older populations comparing these two odor training tasks.Entities:
Keywords: BOLD; blood oxygen level dependent responses; odor identification; odor memory; olfactory engagement; olfactory training
Year: 2021 PMID: 33958869 PMCID: PMC8096456 DOI: 10.2147/NDT.S298303
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Neuropsychiatr Dis Treat ISSN: 1176-6328 Impact factor: 2.570
Figure 1Experimental design of the odor identification and odor memory fMRI tasks. (A) Odorants were first presented outside the scanner, followed by 10-second presentations of those odors and novel odors with questions asking subjects to indicate with their fingers if they recognized the old odors. Odor presentations are interspersed by 20-second rest intervals of odorless air flow. (B) Six odorants were presented one at a time for 10 seconds, interspersed by 20-second odorless intervals. Participants were instructed to use their fingers to point to the name of odorants on the screen corresponding to the smell they were perceiving.
Socio-Demographic Characteristics and Olfactory Task Performances in the Study Population
| Characteristics | Frequency ( | Percentage |
|---|---|---|
| Female | 9 | 75 |
| Race: | ||
| Black/African American | 11 | 99.67 |
| Other | 1 | 8.33 |
| Education: | ||
| 8–12 years | 5 | 41.67 |
| Graduate/Some college/Associate | 7 | 58.33 |
| Employment status: | ||
| Retired | 7 | 58.33 |
| Self-employed | 1 | 8.33 |
| Unemployed | 4 | 33.33 |
| Never married | 5 | 41.67 |
| Age | 66.08 (4.99) | 55–74 |
| Odor Identification | 17.9% (3.3%) | 0–39% |
| Odor Memory | 62.0% (3.9%) | 39–78% |
Results of Comparison of Odor Identification (OI) and Odor Memory (OM) Tasks (ie, OI > OM Contrasts), Depicting Olfactory Brain Regions Which Were More Significantly Activated by OI Compared to OM Tasks
| Brain Region | Peak | FDR Cluster Corrected | Cluster Size | MNI Coordinates |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| R Middle Temporal | 12.30 | 0.000 | 1306 | 56, −48, 0 |
| Bilateral Precuneus | 5.89 | 4, −56, 44 | ||
| R Hippocampus | 4.47 | 40, −38, −8 | ||
| L Superior Parietal | 5.50 | −24, −72, 50 | ||
| R Superior Parietal | 5.14 | 30, −72, 46 | ||
| L Middle Temporal | 3.34 | −42, −52, −4 | ||
| L Inferior Orbital Frontal | 5.95 | 0.000 | 738 | −32, 36, −16 |
| L Superior Frontal | 5.22 | −12, 46, 18 | ||
| L Insula | 3.45 | −26, 20, −18 | ||
| R Medial Orbital Frontal | 5.36 | 0.087* | 214 | 8, 52, −16 |
| L Medial Orbital Frontal | 4.54 | 0.055* | 257 | −12, 42, −10 |
| L Caudate | 3.80 | −18, 22, 0 | ||
| R Superior Parietal | 4.67 | 0.055* | 261 | 24, −36, 70 |
| Bilateral Cerebellum (Culmen and Vermis) | 4.18 | 0.014 | 392 | 0, −60, −22 |
Note: *Regions that are included even though they are not significant following FDR correction as these areas are involved in olfaction, and with more subjects would have reached significance.
Figure 2Olfactory brain regions exhibiting greater activation for odor identification task than for odor memory task contrast.
Result of Analysis of Piriform Cortex Activation for the Odor Memory (OM) Task Greater Than Odor Identification Task (ie, OM > OI) Contrast. Greater Activation of the Piriform Cortex by OM > OI Contrast Was Not Statistically Significant
| Brain Region | Peak | FDR Cluster Corrected | Cluster Size | MNI Coordinates |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| R Piriform | 2.57 | 0.944 | 83 | 16, 0, −6 |
| L Piriform | 2.61 | 0.944 | 77 | −20, −2, −8 |
Figure 3Activation of right and left piriform cortices by both odor memory and odor identification tasks compared to no odor contrast. Odor memory slightly activated the piriform more than the odor identification, but this greater activation (OM