Resolution and reproducibility of BOLD and perfusion functional MRI at 3.0 Tesla.
van Gelderen P, W H Wu C, de Zwart JA, Cohen L, Hallett M, Duyn JH.
Advanced MRI, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, Maryland 20892-1065, USA. gelderen@nih.gov
Visual and somatosensory activation studies were performed on normal subjects to
compare the spatial discrimination and reproducibility between functional MRI
(fMRI) methods based on blood oxygen level-dependent (BOLD) and perfusion contrast.
To allow simultaneous measurement of BOLD and perfusion contrast, a dedicated MRI
acquisition technique was developed. Repeated experiments of sensory stimulation
of single digits of the right hand showed an average variability of activation
amplitude of 25% for BOLD data, and a significantly lower variability of 21% for
perfusion data. No significant difference in the variability of the locus of
activity was observed between the BOLD and perfusion data. In somatotopy experiments,
digits II and V were subjected to passive sensory stimulation. Both the BOLD and
perfusion data showed substantial overlap in the activation patterns from the two
digits. In a retinotopy study, two stimuli were alternated to excite different
patches of V1. Again there was substantial overlap between the activation patterns
from both stimuli, although the perfusion performed somewhat better than the BOLD
method. Particularly for the visual studies, the overlap in activation patterns was
more than expected based on the fine-scale retinotopic mapping of cortical activity,
suggesting that both BOLD and perfusion contrast mechanisms contribute substantially
to the point-spread function (PSF).
PMID: 16086372 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]