BOLD-Perfusion Coupling during Monocular and Binocular Stimulation
Open Access
- 1 January 2008
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Hindawi Limited in International Journal of Biomedical Imaging
- Vol. 2008, 1-6
- https://doi.org/10.1155/2008/628718
Abstract
Previous studies have suggested that during selective activation of a subset of the zones comprising a columnar system in visual cortex, perfusion increases uniformly in all columns of the system, while increases in oxidative metabolism occur predominantly in the activated columns. This could lead to disproportionately large blood oxygenation level-dependent (BOLD) signal increases for a given flow increase during monocular (relative to binocular) stimulation, due to contributions from columns which undergo large increases in perfusion with little or no change in oxidative metabolism. In the present study, we sought to test this hypothesis by measuring BOLD-perfusion coupling ratios in spatially averaged signals over V1 during monocular and binocular visual stimulation. It was found that, although withholding input to one eye resulted in statistically significant decreases in BOLD and perfusion signals in primary visual cortex, the ratio between BOLD and perfusion increases did not change significantly. These results do not support a gross mismatch between spatial patterns of flow and metabolism response during monocular stimulation.Keywords
Funding Information
- Canadian Institutes of Health Research (MOP 84378)
This publication has 19 references indexed in Scilit:
- Flow‐metabolism coupling in human visual, motor, and supplementary motor areas assessed by magnetic resonance imagingMagnetic Resonance in Medicine, 2007
- Reproducibility of BOLD, perfusion, and CMRO2 measurements with calibrated-BOLD fMRINeuroImage, 2007
- Heterogeneous Oxygen Extraction in the Visual Cortex during Activation in Mild Hypoxic Hypoxia Revealed by Quantitative Functional Magnetic Resonance ImagingJournal of Cerebral Blood Flow & Metabolism, 2005
- Coupling of cerebral blood flow and oxygen consumption during physiological activation and deactivation measured with fMRINeuroImage, 2004
- Human Ocular Dominance Columns as Revealed by High-Field Functional Magnetic Resonance ImagingNeuron, 2001
- Localized cerebral blood flow response at submillimeter columnar resolutionProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2001
- Vascular imprints of neuronal activity: Relationships between the dynamics of cortical blood flow, oxygenation, and volume changes following sensory stimulationProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 1997
- Interactions Between Electrical Activity and Cortical Microcirculation Revealed by Imaging Spectroscopy: Implications for Functional Brain MappingScience, 1996
- Long-range horizontal connections and their role in cortical reorganization revealed by optical recording of cat primary visual cortexNature, 1995
- Functional anatomy of macaque striate cortex. I. Ocular dominance, binocular interactions, and baseline conditionsJournal of Neuroscience, 1988