Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI)

Mapping the spinal and supraspinal pathways of dynamic mechanical allodynia in the human trigeminal system using cardiac-gated fMRI

Following injury and inflammation, pain to light stroking (dynamic mechanical allodynia) might develop at the damaged site (primary area) or in adjacent normal tissue (secondary area). Using fMRI we mapped changes in the spinal trigeminal nucleus (spV), and supraspinal brainstem nuclei following heat/capsaicin-induced primary and secondary dynamic mechanical allodynia in the human trigeminal system. The role of these structures in dynamic mechanical allodynia has not been clarified yet in humans.

Publication Type: 
Journal Articles
Journal: 
Neuroimage

MRI of spontaneous fluctuations after acute cerebral ischemia in nonhuman primates

PURPOSE: To study the spontaneous low-frequency blood oxygenation level-dependent (BOLD) functional MRI (fMRI) signal fluctuations during hyperacute focal cerebral ischemia.

Publication Type: 
Journal Articles
Journal: 
J Magn Reson Imaging

Imaging cerebral gene transcripts in live animals

To circumvent the limitations of using postmortem brain in molecular assays, we used avidin-biotin binding to couple superparamagnetic iron oxide nanoparticles (SPIONs) (15-20 nm) to phosphorothioate-modified oligodeoxynucleotides (sODNs) with sequence complementary to c-fos and beta-actin mRNA (SPION-cfos and SPION-beta-actin, respectively) (14-22 nm). The Stern-Volmer constant for the complex of SPION and fluorescein isothiocyanate (FITC)-sODN is 3.1 x 10(6)/m.

Publication Type: 
Journal Articles
Journal: 
J Neurosci

Forebrain ischemia-reperfusion simulating cardiac arrest in mice induces edema and DNA fragmentation in the brain

Brain injury affects one-third of persons who survive after heart attack, even with restoration of spontaneous circulation by cardiopulmonary resuscitation. We studied brain injury resulting from transient bilateral carotid artery occlusion (BCAO) and reperfusion by simulating heart attack and restoration of circulation, respectively, in live C57Black6 mice. This model is known to induce neuronal death in the hippocampus, striatum, and cortex. We report the appearance of edema after transient BCAO of 60 minutes and 1 day of reperfusion.

Publication Type: 
Journal Articles
Journal: 
Mol Imaging

MR contrast probes that trace gene transcripts for cerebral ischemia in live animals

The aim of this research was to validate transcription magnetic resonance (MR) imaging (MRI) for gene transcript targeting in acute neurological disorders in live subjects. We delivered three MR probe variants with superparamagnetic iron oxide nanoparticles (SPION, a T2 susceptibility agent) linked to a phosphorothioate-modified oligodeoxynucleotide (sODN) complementary to c-fos mRNA (SPION-cfos) or beta-actin mRNA (SPION-beta-actin) and to sODN with random sequence (SPION-Ran).

Publication Type: 
Journal Articles
Journal: 
FASEB J

Parallel MRI reconstruction using variance partitioning regularization

Multiple receivers can be utilized to enhance the spatiotemporal resolution of MRI by employing the parallel imaging technique. Previously, we have reported the L-curve Tikhonov regularization technique to mitigate noise amplification resulting from the geometrical correlations between channels in a coil array. Nevertheless, one major disadvantage of regularized image reconstruction is lengthy computational time in regularization parameter estimation.

Publication Type: 
Journal Articles
Journal: 
Magn Reson Med

Sensitivity-encoded (SENSE) proton echo-planar spectroscopic imaging (PEPSI) in the human brain

Magnetic resonance spectroscopic imaging (MRSI) provides spatially resolved metabolite information that is invaluable for both neuroscience studies and clinical applications. However, lengthy data acquisition times, which are a result of time-consuming phase encoding, represent a major challenge for MRSI. Fast MRSI pulse sequences that use echo-planar readout gradients, such as proton echo-planar spectroscopic imaging (PEPSI), are capable of fast spectral-spatial encoding and thus enable acceleration of image acquisition times.

Publication Type: 
Journal Articles
Journal: 
Magn Reson Med

Magnocellular projections as the trigger of top-down facilitation in recognition

Object recognition is traditionally viewed as a hierarchical, bottom-up neural process. This view has been challenged recently by theoretical models and by findings indicating that top-down processes are involved in facilitating recognition. However, how such high-level information can be activated quickly enough to facilitate the bottom-up processing is yet unknown. We propose that such top-down facilitation is triggered by magnocellular information projected early and rapidly to the orbitofrontal cortex.

Publication Type: 
Journal Articles
Journal: 
J Neurosci

Increased temporal and prefrontal activity in response to semantic associations in schizophrenia

CONTEXT: Loosening of associations has long been considered a core feature of schizophrenia, but its neural correlate remains poorly understood.
OBJECTIVE: To test the hypothesis that, in comparison with healthy control subjects, patients with schizophrenia show increased neural activity within inferior prefrontal and temporal cortices in response to directly and indirectly semantically related (relative to unrelated) words.
DESIGN: A functional neuroimaging study using a semantic priming paradigm.
SETTING: Lindemann Mental Health Center, Boston, Mass.

Publication Type: 
Journal Articles
Journal: 
Arch Gen Psychiatry

Boosting the sampling efficiency of q-Ball imaging using multiple wavevector fusion

q-Ball imaging (QBI) is a high-angular-resolution diffusion imaging (HARDI) method that is capable of resolving complex, subvoxel white matter (WM) architecture. QBI requires time-intensive sampling of the diffusion signal and large diffusion wavevectors. Here we describe a reconstruction scheme for QBI, termed multiple wavevector fusion (MWF), that substantially boosts the sampling efficiency and signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) of QBI. The MWF reconstruction operates by nonlinearly fusing the diffusion signal from separate low and high wavevector acquisitions.

Publication Type: 
Journal Articles
Journal: 
Magn Reson Med

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