𝔖 Bobbio Scriptorium
✦   LIBER   ✦

Relative changes of cerebral arterial and venous blood volumes during increased cerebral blood flow: Implications for BOLD fMRI

✍ Scribed by Sang-Pil Lee; Timothy Q. Duong; Guang Yang; Costantino Iadecola; Seong-Gi Kim


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
2001
Tongue
English
Weight
242 KB
Volume
45
Category
Article
ISSN
0740-3194

No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.

✦ Synopsis


Abstract

Measurement of cerebral arterial and venous blood volumes during increased cerebral blood flow can provide important information regarding hemodynamic regulation under normal, pathological, and neuronally active conditions. In particular, the change in venous blood volume induced by neural activity is one critical component of the blood oxygenation level‐dependent (BOLD) signal because BOLD contrast is dependent only on venous blood, not arterial blood. Thus, relative venous and arterial blood volume (rCBV) and cerebral blood flow (rCBF) in α‐chlorolase‐anesthetized rats under hypercapnia were measured by novel diffusion‐weighted ^19^F NMR following an i.v. administration of intravascular tracer, perfluorocarbons, and continuous arterial spin labeling methods, respectively. The relationship between rCBF and total rCBV during hypercapnia was rCBV(total) = rCBF^0.40^, which is consistent with previous PET measurement in monkeys. This relationship can be linearized in a CBF range of 50–130 ml/100 g/min as Δ__rCBV(total)/ Δ__rCBF = 0.31 where ΔrCBV and ΔrCBF represent rCBV and rCBF changes. The average arterial volume fraction was 0.25 at a basal condition with CBF of ∼60 ml/100 g/min and increased up to 0.4 during hypercapnia. The change in venous rCBV was 2‐fold smaller than that of total rCBV (Δ__rCBV(vein)/Δ__rCBF = 0.15), while the arterial rCBV change was 2.5 times larger than that of total rCBV (Δ__rCBV(artery)/Δ__rCBF = 0.79). These NMR results were confirmed by vessel diameter measurements with in vivo videomicroscopy. The absolute venous blood volume change contributes up to 36% of the total blood volume change during hypercapnia. Our findings provide a quantitative physiological model of BOLD contrast. Magn Reson Med 45:791–800, 2001. © 2001 Wiley‐Liss, Inc.


📜 SIMILAR VOLUMES


Single-coil arterial spin-tagging for es
✍ James R. Ewing; Yue Cao; Joseph Fenstermacher 📂 Article 📅 2001 🏛 John Wiley and Sons 🌐 English ⚖ 260 KB

## Abstract The single‐capillary model was applied to the exchange microvessels for water in the cerebral parenchyma and used to calculate blood‐to‐brain flux of water; the theory of the steady‐state arterial spin‐tagging (AST) technique for estimating cerebral blood flow (CBF) was revised to incor