Laminar fMRI using T-prepared multi-echo FLASH.

Neuroimage

Erwin L. Hahn Institute for Magnetic Resonance Imaging, University of Duisburg-Essen, 45141 Essen, Germany; High-Field and Hybrid MR Imaging, University Hospital Essen, University of Duisburg-Essen, 45147 Essen, Germany.

Published: August 2021

Functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) using blood oxygenation level dependent (BOLD) contrast at a sub-millimeter scale is a promising technique to probe neural activity at the level of cortical layers. While gradient echo (GRE) BOLD sequences exhibit the highest sensitivity, their signal is confounded by unspecific extravascular (EV) and intravascular (IV) effects of large intracortical ascending veins and pial veins leading to a downstream blurring effect of local signal changes. In contrast, spin echo (SE) fMRI promises higher specificity towards signal changes near the microvascular compartment. However, the T-weighted signal is typically sampled with a gradient echo readout imposing additional T'-weighting. In this work, we used a T-prepared (T-prep) sequence with short GRE readouts to investigate its capability to acquire laminar fMRI data during a visual task in humans at 7 T. By varying the T-prep echo time (TE) and acquiring multiple gradient echoes (TE) per excitation, we studied the specificity of the sequence and the influence of possible confounding contributions to the shape of laminar fMRI profiles. By fitting and extrapolating the multi-echo GRE data to a TE = 0 ms condition, we show for the first time laminar profiles free of T'-pollution, confined to gray matter. This finding is independent of TE, except for the shortest one (31 ms) where hints of a remaining intravascular component can be seen. For TE > 0 ms a prominent peak at the pial surface is observed that increases with longer TE and dominates the shape of the profiles independent of the amount of T-weighting. Simulations show that the peak at the pial surface is a result of static EV dephasing around pial vessels in CSF visible in GM due to partial voluming. Additionally, another, weaker, static dephasing effect is observed throughout all layers of the cortex, which is particularly obvious in the data with shortest T-prep echo time. Our simulations show that this cannot be explained by intravascular dephasing but that it is likely caused by extravascular effects of the intracortical and pial veins. We conclude that even for TE as short as 2.3 ms, the T'-weighting added to the T-weighting is enough to dramatically affect the laminar specificity of the BOLD signal change. However, the bulk of this corruption stems from CSF partial volume effects which can in principle be addressed by increasing the spatial resolution of the acquisition.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.neuroimage.2021.118163DOI Listing

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