Voxelwise optimization of hemodynamic lags to improve regional CVR estimates in breath-hold fMRI*

2020 
Cerebrovascular Reactivity (CVR), the responsiveness of blood vessels to a vasodilatory stimulus, is an important indicator of cerebrovascular health. Assessing CVR with fMRI, we can measure the change in the Blood Oxygen Level Dependent (BOLD) response induced by a change in CO2 pressure (%BOLD/mmHg). However, there exists a temporal offset between the recorded CO2 pressure and the local BOLD response, due to both measurement and physiological delays. If this offset is not corrected for, voxel-wise CVR values will not be accurate. In this paper, we propose a framework for mapping hemodynamic lag in breath-hold fMRI data. As breath-hold tasks drive task-correlated head motion artifacts in BOLD fMRI data, our framework for lag estimation fits a model that includes polynomial terms and head motion parameters, as well as a shifted variant of the CO2 regressor (±9 s in 0.3 s increments), and the hemodynamic lag at each voxel is the shift producing the maximum total model R2 within physiological constraints. This approach is evaluated in 8 subjects with multi-echo fMRI data, resulting in robust maps of hemodynamic delay that show consistent regional variation across subjects, and improved contrast-to-noise compared to methods where motion regression is ignored or performed earlier in preprocessing.Clinical Relevance— We map hemodynamic lag using breathhold fMRI, providing insight into vascular transit times and improving the regional accuracy of cerebrovascular reactivity measurements
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