Variability in Resting-State Functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging: The Effect of Body Mass, Blood Pressure, Hematocrit, and Glycated Hemoglobin on Hemodynamic and Neuronal Parameters
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https://hdl.handle.net/10037/28217Date
2022-12-13Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Abstract
Introduction: Replicability has become an increasing focus within the scientific communities with the ongoing
‘‘replication crisis.’’ One area that appears to struggle with unreliable results is resting-state functional magnetic
resonance imaging (rs-fMRI). Therefore, the current study aimed at improving the knowledge of endogenous
factors that contribute to inter-individual variability.
Methods: Arterial blood pressure (BP), body mass, hematocrit, and glycated hemoglobin were investigated as
potential sources of between-subject variability in rs-fMRI, in healthy individuals. Whether changes in restingstate networks (rs-networks) could be attributed to variability in the blood-oxygen-level-dependent (BOLD)-
signal, changes in neuronal activity, or both was of special interest. Within-subject parameters were estimated
by utilizing dynamic-causal modeling, as it allows to make inferences on the estimated hemodynamic
(BOLD-signal dynamics) and neuronal parameters (effective connectivity) separately.
Results: The results of the analyses imply that BP and body mass can cause between-subject and between-group
variability in the BOLD-signal and that all the included factors can affect the underlying connectivity.
Discussion: Given the results of the current and previous studies, rs-fMRI results appear to be susceptible to a range of
factors, which is likely to contribute to the low degree of replicability of these studies. Interestingly, the highest degree
of variability seems to appear within the much-studied default mode network and its connections to other networks.
Publisher
Mary Ann Liebert, Inc.Citation
Sjuls, Specht. Variability in Resting-State Functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging: The Effect of Body Mass, Blood Pressure, Hematocrit, and Glycated Hemoglobin on Hemodynamic and Neuronal Parameters. Brain Connectivity. 2022;12(10):870-882Metadata
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