Abstract

The majority of functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) studies restrict their focus to gray matter regions because this tissue is highly perfused relative to white matter. However, an increasing number of studies are reporting fMRI activation in white matter. The current study had two objectives: 1) to evaluate whether it is possible to detect white matter fMRI activation and 2) to determine whether certain MRI contrast mechanisms are more sensitive to white matter activation (i.e., BOLD contrast- versus T(2)-weighting). Data were acquired from a 4 T MRI using an asymmetric spin echo spiral sequence (ASE spiral). This technique collected three images with equal BOLD contrast weighting and increasing T(2)-weighting. An interhemispheric transfer task was used to elicit activation in the corpus callosum. White matter fMRI activation was examined for the averaged ASE spiral data and for each image separately. Callosal activation was present in all subjects as well as in the group analysis. Analyses revealed that increasing T(2) contrast improved sensitivity as measured by percent signal change. The results suggest that it is possible to detect white matter activation in fMRI and that ASE spiral showed increasing sensitivity to this activation as a function of T(2)-weighting. The findings provide further support for the investigation of white matter fMRI.

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