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Simultaneous BOLD-fMRI and constant infusion FDG-PET data of the resting human brain

Authors :
Daniel Stäb
Malin Premaratne
Zhaolin Chen
Kieran O'Brien
Thomas G. Close
Phillip G. D. Ward
N. Jon Shah
Sharna D. Jamadar
Alex Fornito
Gary F. Egan
Source :
Scientific Data, Vol 7, Iss 1, Pp 1-12 (2020), Scientific Data, Scientific data 7(1), 363 (2020). doi:10.1038/s41597-020-00699-5
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
Nature Publishing Group, 2020.

Abstract

Simultaneous [18 F]-fluorodeoxyglucose positron emission tomography and functional magnetic resonance imaging (FDG-PET/fMRI) provides the capability to image two sources of energetic dynamics in the brain – cerebral glucose uptake and the cerebrovascular haemodynamic response. Resting-state fMRI connectivity has been enormously useful for characterising interactions between distributed brain regions in humans. Metabolic connectivity has recently emerged as a complementary measure to investigate brain network dynamics. Functional PET (fPET) is a new approach for measuring FDG uptake with high temporal resolution and has recently shown promise for assessing the dynamics of neural metabolism. Simultaneous fMRI/fPET is a relatively new hybrid imaging modality, with only a few biomedical imaging research facilities able to acquire FDG PET and BOLD fMRI data simultaneously. We present data for n = 27 healthy young adults (18–20 yrs) who underwent a 95-min simultaneous fMRI/fPET scan while resting with their eyes open. This dataset provides significant re-use value to understand the neural dynamics of glucose metabolism and the haemodynamic response, the synchrony, and interaction between these measures, and the development of new single- and multi-modality image preparation and analysis procedures.<br />Measurement(s) glucose import • haemodynamic response • functional brain measurement Technology Type(s) FDG-Positron Emission Tomography • Blood Oxygen Level-Dependent Functional MRI Factor Type(s) resting human brain Sample Characteristic - Organism Homo sapiens Machine-accessible metadata file describing the reported data: 10.6084/m9.figshare.12994508

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
20524463
Volume :
7
Issue :
1
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Scientific Data
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....59f9ff0e49e9ddfb4e31b48162138cee