Neuronal Activity & Hemodynamics John VanMeter, Ph.D. Center for Functional and Molecular Imaging...

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Neuronal Activity & Hemodynamics John VanMeter, Ph.D. Center for Functional and Molecular Imaging Georgetown University Medical Center

Transcript of Neuronal Activity & Hemodynamics John VanMeter, Ph.D. Center for Functional and Molecular Imaging...

Page 1: Neuronal Activity & Hemodynamics John VanMeter, Ph.D. Center for Functional and Molecular Imaging Georgetown University Medical Center.

Neuronal Activity & Hemodynamics

John VanMeter, Ph.D.

Center for Functional and Molecular ImagingGeorgetown University Medical Center

Page 2: Neuronal Activity & Hemodynamics John VanMeter, Ph.D. Center for Functional and Molecular Imaging Georgetown University Medical Center.

Outline

• BOLD contrast fMRI conceptually• Relationship between BOLD contrast and

hemodynamics • Cellular energy processes• Properties of the vasculature and blood flow• History of BOLD contrast• Relationship between neuronal glucose

metabolism and blood flow• Theories about properties of BOLD contrast

mechanisms

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BOLD Contrast fMRI

• BOLD = Blood Oxygen Level Dependent contrast method

• Fundamentally BOLD contrast is an indirect measure of blood flow

• BOLD contrast as a measure of neuronal activity relies on:– Properties of the blood (deoxygenated

hemoglobin concentration)– Relationship between blood flow and

neuronal activity

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Basic Model of Relationship Between BOLD fMRI & Neuronal Activity

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Neuron

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Neuronal Activity

• Integrative Activity– “Sum” of inputs at dendrites and/or soma

(cell body)

• Signaling Activity– Output from integrative activity resulting in

signal transmission – Action Potential generates wave of

depolarization down axon resulting in influx of Ca2+

– Subsequent release of neurotransmitter into synaptic cleft

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Neurotransmitter Release

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Brain Energy Budget(Rat Gray Matter)

• Majority of energy used by brain related to integrative and signaling done in neurons

• Thus, measures of energy consumption indicative of neuronal activity

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Cerebral Metabolism

• fMRI cannot measure changes at the level of individual neurons

• Functional imaging techniques fundamentally rely on measures of neuronal energy components– Glucose– Oxygen

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Nitty Gritty Details of Cellular Energy

• ATP - adenosine triphosphate basic unit of cellular energy

• Contains 3 phosphate groups• Hydrolysis

– Energy is released when a phosphate group is removed by insertion of a water molecule

• ATP produced from glucose (and pyruvate)

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ATP from GlucoseAerobic Metabolism

• Three step process– Glycolysis

• Glucose molecule is broken down in the cell resulting in pyruvate

• 2 ATP consumed, 4 ATP produced = net increase +2 ATP

– TCA cycle (aka Krebs cycle)• Oxygen (2 molecules) extracted from hemoglobin

to oxidize pryuvate

– Electron transport chain• Ultimate output of +34 ATP molecules

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ATP from Glucose Anaerobic Metabolism

• Glycolysis still occurs• Pyruvate is reduced to lactate• Fast source of ATP but inefficient

– 100 times faster than aerobic glycolysis

– Only get 2 ATP molecules!

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Oxygen-to-Glucose Index (OGI)

• Aerobic processing uses 6 molecules of oxygen for every 1 molecule of glucose

• Empirical measurements at rest have shown OGI to be 5.5:1

• Implies most metabolism in neurons is aerobic but a small portion is anaerobic

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Delivery of Glucose & Oxygen

• Vascular system (blood supply) is used to delivery basic components of cellular energy

• fMRI measures changes in the oxygenated state of hemoglobin

fMRI intimately linked to vascular system

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Components of Vasculature

• Arteries, arterioles, capillaries delivery oxygenated (oxy) blood and glucose to cells

• Veins carry waste and deoxygenated (de-oxy) blood back to the heart

• Oxygen & glucose extraction occurs at surface of capillaries

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Arteries & Veins of the Brain

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Major Arteries & Veins

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Blood Flow

• Increase in neuronal activity supported by increase in blood flow

• Rate varies due to vessel diameter, blood pressure, density of red blood cells, amount of O2 and CO2

– 40 cm/s in internal carotid– 10-250 mm/s in smaller arteries– 1 mm/s in capillaries

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Blood Flow

• Blood flow is volume of blood delivered per unit of time

• Proportional to blood pressure difference at either end of the blood vessel divided by resistance

• Resistance determined by vessel radius• Small changes in vessel diameter

results in major changes in flow• Flow controlled in part by resistance in

vessels

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Stimulation, Arteriole Dilation, Blood Velocity, Blood Pressure

• Stimulation results in dilation

• Increasing velocity of blood

• But blood pressure remains constant

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Vasodilation Spatial Extent

• Winn, et al. localized neurons activated by stimulation by measuring changes in field potentials

• Changes in vasodilation are localized

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Spatial Extent of Vasodilation

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Why is Spatial Extent of Vasodilation Important?

• Ultimately the area over which the vasculature changes in response to neuronal activity determines spatial specificity of blood flow changes and thus a lower bound on spatial resolution for fMRI

BOLD fMRI is limited to ~1-2mm of spatial resolution

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Summary

• fMRI BOLD signal arises from increase in blood flow

• Blood flow is primary means for delivering oxygen and glucose to neurons for production of energy

• Aerobic and anaerobic glycolysis implies different amounts of ATP (energy) production and oxygen requirements