Publication:
Heterogeneous motor BOLD-fMRI responses in brain areas exhibiting negative BOLD cerebrovascular reactivity indicate that steal phenomenon does not always result from exhausted cerebrovascular reserve capacity

Date

Date

Date
2023
Dissertation
dc.contributor.institutionUniversity of Zurich
dc.date.accessioned2024-01-08T15:05:29Z
dc.date.available2024-01-08T15:05:29Z
dc.date.issued2023-12-01
dc.description.abstractIntroduction: Brain areas exhibiting negative blood oxygenation-level dependent cerebrovascular reactivity (BOLD-CVR) responses to carbon dioxide (CO2) are thought to suffer from a completely exhausted autoregulatory cerebrovascular reserve capacity and exhibit vascular steal phenomenon. If this assumption is correct, the presence of vascular steal phenomenon should subsequently result in an equal negative fMRI signal response during a motor-task based BOLD-fMRI study (increase in metabolism without an increase in cerebral blood flow due to exhausted reserve capacity) in otherwise functional brain tissue. To investigate this premise, the aim of this study was to further investigate motor-task based BOLD-fMRI signal responses in brain areas exhibiting negative BOLD-CVR. Material and methods: Seventy-one datasets of patients with cerebrovascular steno-occlusive disease without motor defects, who underwent a CO2-calibrated motor task-based BOLD-fMRI study with a fingertapping paradigm and a subsequent BOLD-CVR study with a precisely controlled CO2-challenge during the same MRI examination, were included. We compared BOLD-fMRI signal responses in the bilateral pre- and postcentral gyri - i.e. Region of Interest (ROI) with the corresponding BOLD-CVR in this ROI. The ROI was determined using a second level group analysis of the BOLD-fMRI task study of 42 healthy individuals undergoing the same study protocol. Results: An overall decrease in BOLD-CVR was associated with a decrease in BOLD-fMRI signal response within the ROI. For patients exhibiting negative BOLD-CVR, we found both positive and negative motor-task based BOLD-fMRI signal responses. Conclusion: We show that the presence of negative BOLD-CVR responses to CO2 is associated with heterogeneous motor task-based BOLD-fMRI signal responses, where some patients show -more presumed- negative BOLD-fMRI signal responses, while other patient showed positive BOLD-fMRI signal responses. This finding may indicate that the autoregulatory vasodilatory reserve capacity does not always need to be completely exhausted for vascular steal phenomenon to occur.
dc.identifier.urihttps://www.zora.uzh.ch/handle/20.500.14742/213499
dc.language.isoeng
dc.subject.ddc610 Medicine & health
dc.titleHeterogeneous motor BOLD-fMRI responses in brain areas exhibiting negative BOLD cerebrovascular reactivity indicate that steal phenomenon does not always result from exhausted cerebrovascular reserve capacity
dc.typedissertation
dcterms.accessRightsinfo:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess
dspace.entity.typePublicationen
uzh.agreement.thesisYES
uzh.contributor.authorHiller, Aimée
uzh.contributor.correspondenceYes
uzh.contributor.examinerRegli, Luca
uzh.contributor.examinerFierstra, Jorn
uzh.contributor.examinercorrespondenceYes
uzh.contributor.examinercorrespondenceNo
uzh.document.availabilitypublished_version
uzh.eprint.datestamp2024-01-08 15:05:29
uzh.eprint.lastmod2024-05-21 20:38:05
uzh.eprint.statusChange2024-01-08 15:05:29
uzh.harvester.ethYes
uzh.harvester.nbYes
uzh.identifier.doi10.5167/uzh-252288
uzh.oastatus.zoraGreen
uzh.publication.citationHiller, Aimée . Heterogeneous motor BOLD-fMRI responses in brain areas exhibiting negative BOLD cerebrovascular reactivity indicate that steal phenomenon does not always result from exhausted cerebrovascular reserve capacity. 2023, University of Zurich, Faculty of Medicine.
uzh.publication.facultymedicine
uzh.publication.thesisTypecumulative
uzh.relatedItem.haspartHeterogeneous motor BOLD-fMRI responses in brain areas exhibiting negative BOLD cerebrovascular reactivity indicate that steal phenomenon does not always result from exhausted cerebrovascular reserve capacity*
uzh.relatedItem.id252353
uzh.workflow.eprintid252288
uzh.workflow.fulltextStatuspublic
uzh.workflow.revisions18
uzh.workflow.rightsCheckkeininfo
uzh.workflow.statusarchive
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