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Title: Quantifying the intra- and extravascular contributions to spin-echo fMRI at 3 T
Author(s): Jochimsen, T.H.
Norris, D.G.
Mildner, T.
Moller, H.E.
Publication year: 2004
Document type: Article / Letter to editor
Journal: Magnetic Resonance in Medicine
ISSN: 0740-3194
Volume: vol. 52
Issue: iss. 4
Start page: p. 724
End page: p. 732
Abstract: Functional MRI (fMRI) by means of spin-echo (SE) techniques provides an interesting alternative to gradient-echo methods because the contrast is based primarily on dynamic averaging associated with the blood oxygenation level-dependent (BOLD) effect. In this article the contributions from different brain compartments to BOLD signal changes in SE echo planar imaging (EPI) are investigated. To gain a better understanding of the underlying mechanisms that cause the fMRI contrast, two experiments are presented: First, the intravascular contribution is decomposed into two fractions with different regimes of flow by means of diffusion-weighting gradient schemes which are either flow-compensated, or will maximally dephase moving spins. Second, contributions from the intra- and extravascular space are selectively suppressed by combining flow-weighting with additional refocusing pulses. The results indicate two qualitatively different components of flowing blood which contribute to the BOLD contrast and a nearly equal share in functional signal from the intra- and extravascular compartments at TE approximate to 80 ms and 3 T. Combining these results, there is evidence that at least one-half of the functional signal originates from the parenchyma in SE fMRI at 3 T. The authors suggest the use of flow-compensated diffusion weighting for SE fMRI to improve the sensitivity to the parenchyma. (C) 2004 Wiley-Liss, Inc.
Subject: Biophysics
Organization: Biophysics
Appears in Collections:Academic bibliography

Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/2066/60580

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