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High-resolution relaxometry-based calibrated fMRI in murine brain: Metabolic differences between awake and anesthetized states

Authors :
Mengyang Xu
Binshi Bo
Mengchao Pei
Yuyan Chen
Christina Y Shu
Qikai Qin
Lydiane Hirschler
Jan M Warnking
Emmanuel L Barbier
Zhiliang Wei
Hanzhang Lu
Peter Herman
Fahmeed Hyder
Zhi-jie Liu
Zhifeng Liang
Garth J Thompson
Source :
Journal of Cerebral Blood Flow and Metabolism. SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC, Journal of Cerebral Blood Flow and Metabolism
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) techniques using the blood-oxygen level-dependent (BOLD) signal have shown great potential as clinical biomarkers of disease. Thus, using these techniques in preclinical rodent models is an urgent need. Calibrated fMRI is a promising technique that can provide high-resolution mapping of cerebral oxygen metabolism (CMRO2). However, calibrated fMRI is difficult to use in rodent models for several reasons: rodents are anesthetized, stimulation-induced changes are small, and gas challenges induce noisy CMRO2 predictions. We used, in mice, a relaxometry-based calibrated fMRI method which uses cerebral blood flow (CBF) and the BOLD-sensitive magnetic relaxation component, R2′, the same parameter derived in the deoxyhemoglobin-dilution model of calibrated fMRI. This method does not use any gas challenges, which we tested on mice in both awake and anesthetized states. As anesthesia induces a whole-brain change, our protocol allowed us to overcome the former limitations of rodent studies using calibrated fMRI. We revealed 1.5-2 times higher CMRO2, dependent upon brain region, in the awake state versus the anesthetized state. Our results agree with alternative measurements of whole-brain CMRO2 in the same mice and previous human anesthesia studies. The use of calibrated fMRI in rodents has much potential for preclinical fMRI.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of Cerebral Blood Flow and Metabolism. SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC, Journal of Cerebral Blood Flow and Metabolism
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....a6b21a84e4f16c8c2ecf696b4b5f49d0
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1177/0271678x211062279