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Brain-heart interactions: challenges and opportunities with functional magnetic resonance imaging at ultra-high field
Chang, Catie; Raven, Erika P; Duyn, Jeff H
Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) at ultra-high field (UHF) strengths (7 T and above) offers unique opportunities for studying the human brain with increased spatial resolution, contrast and sensitivity. However, its reliability can be compromised by factors such as head motion, image distortion and non-neural fluctuations of the functional MRI signal. The objective of this review is to provide a critical discussion of the advantages and trade-offs associated with UHF imaging, focusing on the application to studying brain-heart interactions. We describe how UHF MRI may provide contrast and resolution benefits for measuring neural activity of regions involved in the control and mediation of autonomic processes, and in delineating such regions based on anatomical MRI contrast. Limitations arising from confounding signals are discussed, including challenges with distinguishing non-neural physiological effects from the neural signals of interest that reflect cardiorespiratory function. We also consider how recently developed data analysis techniques may be applied to high-field imaging data to uncover novel information about brain-heart interactions.
PMCID:4822447
PMID: 27044994
ISSN: 1364-503x
CID: 5499162
Diffusion imaging of auditory and auditory-limbic connectivity in tinnitus: preliminary evidence and methodological challenges
Seydell-Greenwald, Anna; Raven, Erika P; Leaver, Amber M; Turesky, Ted K; Rauschecker, Josef P
Subjective tinnitus, or "ringing in the ears," is perceived by 10 to 15 percent of the adult population and causes significant suffering in a subset of patients. While it was originally thought of as a purely auditory phenomenon, there is increasing evidence that the limbic system influences whether and how tinnitus is perceived, far beyond merely determining the patient's emotional reaction to the phantom sound. Based on functional imaging and electrophysiological data, recent articles frame tinnitus as a "network problem" arising from abnormalities in auditory-limbic interactions. Diffusion-weighted magnetic resonance imaging is a noninvasive method for investigating anatomical connections in vivo. It thus has the potential to provide anatomical evidence for the proposed changes in auditory-limbic connectivity. However, the few diffusion imaging studies of tinnitus performed to date have inconsistent results. In the present paper, we briefly summarize the results of previous studies, aiming to reconcile their results. After detailing analysis methods, we then report findings from a new dataset. We conclude that while there is some evidence for tinnitus-related increases in auditory and auditory-limbic connectivity that counteract hearing-loss related decreases in auditory connectivity, these results should be considered preliminary until several technical challenges have been overcome.
PMCID:4090469
PMID: 25050181
ISSN: 1687-5443
CID: 5499152
THE MECHANISM OF ACTION OF ANTIPSYCHOTICS AND INTRACORTICAL MYELINATION IN SCHIZOPHRENIA [Meeting Abstract]
Bartzokis, George; Lu, Po; Kirkpatrick, Chandra; Pyle, Meghan; Raven, Erika; Mintz, Jim; Ventura, Joseph; Casaus, Laurie; Luo, John; Subotnik, Kenneth; Nuechterlein, Keith H.
ISI:000418744300005
ISSN: 0920-9964
CID: 5499312
The Mechanism of Action of Antipsychotics and Intracortical Myelination in Schizophrenia [Meeting Abstract]
Bartzokis, George; Lu, Po H.; Kirkpatrick, Chandra J.; Pyle, Meghan H.; Raven, Erika P.; Finn, J. Paul; Villablanca, Pablo; Altshuler, Lori L.; Mintz, Jim; Ventura, Joseph; Casaus, Laurie R.; Luo, John S.; Subotnik, Kenneth L.; Nuechterlein, Keith H.
ISI:000334101802155
ISSN: 0006-3223
CID: 5499302
Increased iron levels and decreased tissue integrity in hippocampus of Alzheimer's disease detected in vivo with magnetic resonance imaging
Raven, Erika P; Lu, Po H; Tishler, Todd A; Heydari, Panthea; Bartzokis, George
BACKGROUND:Iron can catalyze damaging free radical reactions. With age, iron accumulates in brain gray matter regions and may contribute to the risk of developing age-related diseases such as Alzheimer's disease (AD). Prior MRI studies demonstrated increased iron deposits in basal ganglia regions; however, the hippocampus (Hipp), which is heavily damaged in AD, and comparator regions that are resistant to AD damage, such as thalamus (Th), have rarely been examined. OBJECTIVE:To assess iron levels and evidence of tissue damage in Hipp and Th of AD subjects and healthy controls. METHODS:Thirty-one AD and sixty-eight healthy control subjects participated in this study. High- and low-field strength MRI instruments were used in combination to quantify iron content of ferritin molecules (ferritin iron) using the field dependent relaxation rate increase (FDRI) method. Decreased transverse relaxation rate (R2) was used as an index of tissue damage. RESULTS:Compared with healthy controls, AD subjects had increased ferritin iron in Hipp (p = 0.019) but not Th (p = 0.637), and significantly decreased R2 in Hipp (p < 0.001) but not Th (p = 0.37). In the entire sample, FDRI and R2 were negatively correlated. CONCLUSION/CONCLUSIONS:The data shows that in AD, Hipp damage occurs in conjunction with ferritin iron accumulation. Prospective studies are needed to evaluate how increasing iron levels may influence the trajectory of tissue damage and cognitive and pathologic manifestations of AD.
PMID: 23792695
ISSN: 1875-8908
CID: 5499142
Impact on intracortical myelination trajectory of long acting injection versus oral risperidone in first-episode schizophrenia
Bartzokis, George; Lu, Po H; Raven, Erika P; Amar, Chetan P; Detore, Nicole R; Couvrette, Alexander J; Mintz, Jim; Ventura, Joseph; Casaus, Laurie R; Luo, John S; Subotnik, Kenneth L; Nuechterlein, Keith H
CONTEXT/BACKGROUND:Imaging and post-mortem studies suggest that frontal lobe intracortical myelination is dysregulated in schizophrenia (SZ). Prior MRI studies suggested that early in the treatment of SZ, antipsychotic medications initially increase frontal lobe intracortical myelin (ICM) volume, which subsequently declines prematurely in chronic stages of the disease. Insofar as the trajectory of ICM decline in chronic SZ is due to medication non-adherence or pharmacokinetics, it may be modifiable by long acting injection (LAI) formulations. OBJECTIVES/OBJECTIVE:Assess the effect of risperidone formulation on the ICM trajectory during a six-month randomized trial of LAI (RLAI) versus oral (RisO) in first-episode SZ subjects. DESIGN/METHODS:Two groups of SZ subjects (RLAI, N=9; and RisO, N=13) matched on pre-randomization oral medication exposure were prospectively examined at baseline and 6 months later, along with 12 healthy controls (HCs). Frontal lobe ICM volume was assessed using inversion recovery (IR) and proton density (PD) MRI images. Medication adherence was tracked. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURE/METHODS:ICM volume change scores were adjusted for the change in the HCs. RESULTS:ICM volume increased significantly (p=.005) in RLAI and non-significantly (p=.39) in the RisO groups compared with that of the healthy controls. A differential between-group treatment effect was at a trend level (p=.093). SZ subjects receiving RLAI had better medication adherence and more ICM increases (chi-square p<.05). CONCLUSIONS:The results suggest that RLAI may promote ICM development in first-episode SZ patients. Better adherence and/or pharmacokinetics provided by LAI may modify the ICM trajectory. In vivo MRI myelination measures can help clarify pharmacotherapeutic mechanisms of action.
PMCID:3567927
PMID: 22809684
ISSN: 1573-2509
CID: 5499132
Premenopausal hysterectomy is associated with increased brain ferritin iron
Tishler, Todd A; Raven, Erika P; Lu, Po H; Altshuler, Lori L; Bartzokis, George
Iron is essential for triggering oligodendrocytes to myelinate, however, in gray matter (GM) iron increases with age and is associated with age-related degenerative brain diseases. Women have lower iron levels than men, both in the periphery and in the brain, particularly in white matter (WM), possibly due to iron loss through menstruation. We tested the hypothesis that hysterectomy could increase WM iron levels. We assessed 3 WM and 5 gray matter regions in 39 postmenopausal women, of whom 15 had premenopausal hysterectomy, utilizing a validated magnetic resonance imaging technique called field-dependent R2 increase (FDRI) that quantifies ferritin iron. A group of 54 matched male subjects was included for comparison. Amongst women, hysterectomy was associated with significantly higher frontal lobe WM iron. Men had higher iron levels than women without hysterectomy in 3 brain regions but did not differ from women with hysterectomy in any region. The results suggest that menstruation-associated blood loss is a source of gender differences in brain iron. It is possible that brain iron can be influenced by peripheral iron levels and may thus be a modifiable risk factor for age-related degenerative diseases.
PMCID:3245348
PMID: 21925770
ISSN: 1558-1497
CID: 5499112
The mechanism of action of antipsychotics and intracortical myelination in schizophrenia [Meeting Abstract]
Bartzokis, George; Lu, Po; Couvrette, Alexander; Raven, Erika; DeTore, Nicole; Altshuler, Lori; Mintz, Jim; Ventura, Joseph; Casaus, Laurie; Luo, John; Subotnik, Kenneth; Nuechterlein, Keith
ISI:000308580100030
ISSN: 1751-7885
CID: 5499292
Age-related slowing in cognitive processing speed is associated with myelin integrity in a very healthy elderly sample
Lu, Po H; Lee, Grace J; Raven, Erika P; Tingus, Kathleen; Khoo, Theresa; Thompson, Paul M; Bartzokis, George
Performance on measures of cognitive processing speed (CPS) slows with age, but the biological basis associated with this cognitive phenomenon remains incompletely understood. We assessed the hypothesis that the age-related slowing in CPS is associated with myelin breakdown in late-myelinating regions in a very healthy elderly population. An in vivo magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) biomarker of myelin integrity was obtained from the prefrontal lobe white matter and the genu of the corpus callosum for 152 healthy elderly adults. These regions myelinate later in brain development and are more vulnerable to breakdown due to the effects of normal aging. To evaluate regional specificity, we also assessed the splenium of the corpus callosum as a comparison region, which myelinates early in development and primarily contains axons involved in visual processing. The measure of myelin integrity was significantly correlated with CPS in highly vulnerable late-myelinating regions but not in the splenium. These results have implications for the neurobiology of the cognitive changes associated with brain aging.
PMCID:3269444
PMID: 22133139
ISSN: 1744-411x
CID: 5499122
Long acting injection versus oral risperidone in first-episode schizophrenia: differential impact on white matter myelination trajectory
Bartzokis, George; Lu, Po H; Amar, Chetan P; Raven, Erika P; Detore, Nicole R; Altshuler, Lori L; Mintz, Jim; Ventura, Joseph; Casaus, Laurie R; Luo, John S; Subotnik, Kenneth L; Nuechterlein, Keith H
CONTEXT/BACKGROUND:Imaging and post-mortem studies provide converging evidence that subjects with schizophrenia (SZ) have a dysregulated trajectory of frontal lobe myelination. Prior MRI studies suggested that early in treatment of SZ, antipsychotic medications initially increase frontal lobe white matter (WM) volume, which subsequently declines prematurely in chronic stages of the disease. Insofar as the trajectory of WM decline associated with chronic disease may be due to medication non-adherence, it may be modifiable by long acting injection (LAI) formulations. OBJECTIVES/OBJECTIVE:Examine the impact of antipsychotic formulation on the myelination trajectory during a randomized six-month trial of LAI risperidone (RLAI) versus oral risperidone (RisO) in first-episode SZ subjects. DESIGN/METHODS:Two groups of SZ subjects (RLAI, N=11; and RisO, N=13) that were matched in pre-randomization oral medication exposure and 14 healthy controls (HCs) were prospectively examined. Frontal lobe WM volume was estimated using inversion recovery (IR) MRI images. A brief neuropsychological battery that focused on reaction times was performed at the end of the study. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURE/METHODS:WM volume change scores. RESULTS:WM volume remained stable in the RLAI and decreased significantly in the RisO groups resulting in a significant differential treatment effect, while the HC had a WM change intermediate and not significantly different from the two SZ groups. WM increase was associated with faster reaction times in tests involving frontal lobe function. CONCLUSIONS:The results suggest that RLAI may improve the trajectory of myelination in first-episode patients and have a beneficial impact on cognitive performance. Better adherence provided by LAI may underlie the modified trajectory of myelin development. In vivo MRI biomarkers of myelination can help clarify mechanisms of action of treatment interventions.
PMCID:3172389
PMID: 21767934
ISSN: 1573-2509
CID: 5499102