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Experimental determination of the BOLD field strength dependence in vessels and tissue

537

Citations

24

References

1997

Year

TLDR

The study aimed to quantify how the BOLD signal change depends on magnetic field strength in human visual cortex, comparing venous vessels and gray matter at 0.5, 1.5, and 4 T. High‑resolution fMRI was performed using single‑ and multi‑echo T2*‑weighted FLASH imaging to measure intrinsic BOLD parameters—signal‑to‑noise ratio, R2*, and ΔR2*—between activated and baseline states. Vessel BOLD signal changes were markedly larger than in tissue (≈13–18 % vs 1–3 % across field strengths), SNR increased linearly with field strength, and the theoretical BOLD CNR upper bound was sub‑linear for large vessels but super‑linear for voxels containing mixed capillaries and small veins.

Abstract

Abstract High resolution functional MRI (fMRI) experiments were performed in human visual cortex at 0.5, 1.5, and 4 T to determine the blood oxygenation level dependent (BOLD) field strength response within regions of obvious venous vessels and cortical gray matter (“tissue”). T 2 *‐weighted FLASH images were collected in single‐ and multi‐echo mode and used to determine the intrinsic BOLD parameters, namely, signal‐to‐noise ratio (Ψ), the apparent transverse relaxation rate (R 2 *) and the change in R 2 * (ΔR 2 *) between the activated and baseline states. The authors find the average percentage signal change (ΔS/S, measured at TE = T 2 *) to be large in vessels (13.3 ± 2.3%, 18.4 ± 4.0%, and 15.1 ± 1.2%) compared with that in tissue (1.4 ± 0.7%, 1.9 ± 0.7%, and 3.3 ± 0.2%) at 0.5, 1.5, and 4 T, respectively. The signal‐to‐noise ratio in optimized, fully relaxed proton density weighted gradient echo images was found to increase linearly with respect to the static magnetic field strength (B 0 ). The predicted upper bound on BOLD contrast‐to‐noise ratio (ΔS/R) max as a function of field strength was calculated and found to behave less than linearly in voxels containing vessels larger than the voxel itself and greater than linearly in voxels containing a mixture of capillaries and veins/venules with a diameter less than that of the voxel.

References

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