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Blood oxygenation level‐dependent (BOLD) functional MRI of visual stimulation in the rat retina at 11.7 T
Author(s) -
La Garza Bryan H. De,
Muir Eric R.,
Li Guang,
Shih YenYu I.,
Duong Timothy Q.
Publication year - 2011
Publication title -
nmr in biomedicine
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.278
H-Index - 114
eISSN - 1099-1492
pISSN - 0952-3480
DOI - 10.1002/nbm.1571
Subject(s) - retina , neuroscience , blood oxygen level dependent , blood oxygenation , functional magnetic resonance imaging , visual cortex , pupil , visual field , functional imaging , stimulation , pupillary response , ophthalmology , medicine , psychology
Although optically based imaging techniques provide valuable functional and physiological information of the retina, they are mostly limited to the probing of the retinal surface and require an unobstructed light path. MRI, in contrast, could offer physiological and functional data without depth limitation. Blood oxygenation level‐dependent functional MRI (BOLD fMRI) of the thin rat retina is, however, challenging because of the need for high spatial resolution, and the potential presence of eye movement and susceptibility artifacts. This study reports a novel application of high‐resolution (111 × 111 × 1000 µm 3 ) BOLD fMRI of visual stimulation in the anesthetized rat retina at 11.7 T. A high‐field MRI scanner was utilized to improve the signal‐to‐noise ratio, spatial resolution and BOLD sensitivity. Visual stimuli (8 Hz diffuse achromatic light) robustly increased BOLD responses in the retina [5.0 ± 0.8% from activated pixels and 3.1 ± 1.1% from the whole‐retina region of interest (mean ± SD), n  = 12 trials on six rats, p  < 0.05 compared with baseline]. Some activated pixels were detected surrounding the pupil and ciliary muscle because of accommodation reflex to visual stimuli, and were reduced with atropine and phenylephrine eye drops. BOLD fMRI scans without visual stimulations showed no significantly activated pixels (whole‐retina BOLD changes were 0.08 ± 0.34%, n  = 6 trials on five rats, not statistically different from baseline, p  > 0.05). BOLD fMRI of visual stimulation has the potential to provide clinically relevant data to probe hemodynamic neurovascular coupling and dysfunction of the retina with depth resolution. Copyright © 2010 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.

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