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Using Physics to Image Brain Function. ____________ _________ _______ ___________. Vladislav Toronov, Ph. D. outline. Functional MRI: lack of physiological specificity Principles of Near Infrared Spectro-Imaging NIR study of the physiological basis of fMRI signal
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Using Physics to Image Brain Function ____________ _________ _______ ___________ Vladislav Toronov, Ph. D.
outline Functional MRI: lack of physiological specificity Principles of Near Infrared Spectro-Imaging NIR study of the physiological basis of fMRI signal NIR imaging of brain function
Quantities used in MRI • Longitudinal relaxation time T1 • Transverse relaxation time T2 (T2*) • Proton density
Why MRI provides nice structural images? Due to the large differences in T1 or T2 between tissues
Can MRI be used for metabolic measurements? • Answer: it is very difficult to do because T1 and T2 can depend on many parameters • Example: Changes in the blood content during functional activity
Oxygen Transport to Tissue • Oxygen is transported in hemoglobin molecules of red blood cells: Deoxy-hemoglobin HHb Oxy-hemoglobin: HbO2 • Metabolic measurement: Can MRI be used to measure [HHb] and [HbO2]?
Blood Oxygen Level Dependent effect: Oxygen in the blood modifies T2* Functional brain mapping
Quantitative physiological model of the BOLD signal:R. Buxton, 1998 where Dq=D[HHb]/[HHb]0 Dv=D[tHb]/[tHb]0 Conclusion: MRI does not allow simple separation of oxygenation effects from blood volume effects
Near-Infrared Spectro-Imaging (NIRSI)
Optical Spectroscopy Beer’s law: NIRSI
Absorption ma ~0.1 cm-1 Scattering m’s ~ 10 cm-1 Light Propagation in Tissues NIRSI
Boltzmann Transport Equation Where - radiance [W cm-2 steradian-1] -absorption coefficient [cm-1] -scattering coefficient [cm-1] - source term [W cm-3 steradian-1 s-1]
Diffusion coefficient (scattering) Photon Density Source Absorption Diffusion Approximation Diffusion Equation:
Type of the source modulation: • Continuous Wave • Time Domain (pulse) • Frequency-Domain
Frequency-domain approach Light Source: • Modulation frequency: >=100 MHz • AC, DC and phase NIRSI
Absolute measurements withfrequency-domain spectroscopy multi-distance method Frequency-domain solution for Semi-infinite medium ma: absorption coefficient ms’: reduced scattering coefficient w: angular modulation frequency v : speed of light in tissue SF: phase slope Sac: ln(r2ac) slope SF Log Sac
Method of quantitative FD measurements: Multi-distance Detector fiber bundle Source fibers Flexible pad Direct light block
Estimation of physiological parameters Beer’s law: Total HB ~CBV Oxygenation NIRSI
Near-infrared tissue oximeter detector bundles pmt b RF electronics pmt a laser driver 2 laser driver 1 source fibers multiplexing circuit laser diodes NIRSI Instrumentation
Advantages of NIRSI • Non-invasive • Fast (~ 1 ms) • Highly specific (spectroscopy) • Relatively inexpensive (~$100 K) • Can be easily combined with MRI
NIRSI in Functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging Study of the physiology of the BOLD effect BOLD= Blood Oxygen Level Dependent
BOLD signal model where Dq=D[HHb]/[HHb]0 Dv=D[tHb]/[tHb]0 Study of the BOLD effect
Multi-distance optical probe Detector fiber Laser diodes 690 nm & 830 nm Study of the BOLD effect
Collocation of fMRI signal and optical sensor Optical probe Motor Cortex Study of the BOLD effect
Activation paradigm Motor activation Вlock Design - 10s/17s Time Study of the BOLD effect
Data analysis:Folding (time-locked) average Raw data Folded data Study of the BOLD effect
Time course of hemodynamicand BOLD signals stimulation Study of the BOLD effect
BOLD signal model where Dq=D[HHb]/[HHb]0 Dv=D[tHb]/[tHb]0 Study of the BOLD effect
O2 Diffusion Between Blood and Tissue Cells fout fin Modeling
“Balloon” Model q- normalized Deoxy Hb v- normalized Total Hb t=V0/F0 – mean transit time Oxygen Extraction Fraction Modeling
Modeling “Balloon” Model q- normalized Deoxy Hb v- normalized Total Hb Oxygen Extraction Fraction
Functional Changes in Cerebral Blood Flow from Balloon Model Stimulation Modeling
Why oxygenation increases? • The increase in cerebral blood oxygenation during functional activation is mostly due to an increase in the rCBF velocity, and occurs without a significant swelling of the blood vessels. Washout Effect Modeling
Outcomes The time course of the BOLD fMRI signal corresponds to the changes in the deoxy-hemoglobin concentration BOLD fMRI provides no information about the functional changes in the blood volume This information can be obtained using NIRSI
Locations of the sources and detectors of light on the human head 3 2 1 3 cm 4 detectors B A 8 light sources 6 5 7 Motor Cortex Brain mapping
Backprojection Scheme C34=.5*S3 + .5*S4 C34=.75*S3+.25*S4 3 1 2 4 8 B A detectors 6 light sources (758 and 830 nm) 5 7 Brain mapping
3 1 2 A B 4 8 6 5 7 Real time video of brain activation D [Hb] (mM) -1.0 -0.5 0.0 0.5 Brain mapping
S D 3D NIR imaging of brain function using structural MRI
dma Ln –the mean time photon spends in voxel n relative to the total travel time A small change in absorption S D
Underdetermined Problem Solve an equation: Number of measurements<< number of voxels 3D imaging
Sensitivity is high near the surface and low in the brain Source Detector 3D imaging
Using structural MRI info Scalp Cerebro- Spinal Fluid Scull Brain CONSTRAINT 3D imaging
Monte Carlo Simulation • Structural MR image • is segmented in • four tissue types: • Scalp • Skull • CSF • Brain • 10,000,000 “photons” Source Detector 3D imaging
Image Reconstruction Underdetermined Problem Y=Ax Solution: Simultaneous Iterative Reconstruction Technique 3D imaging