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Pfurtscheller, G; Schwerdtfeger, AR; Rassler, B; Andrade, A; Schwarz, G.
MRI-related anxiety can induce slow BOLD oscillations coupled with cardiac oscillations
CLIN NEUROPHYSIOL. 2021; 132(9): 2083-2090.
Doi: 10.1016/j.clinph.2021.05.021
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- Co-Autor*innen der Med Uni Graz
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Schwarz Gerhard
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- Abstract:
- Objective: Although about 1-2% of MRI examinations must be aborted due to anxiety, there is little research on how MRI-related anxiety affects BOLD signals in resting states. Methods: We re-analyzed cardiac beat-to beat interval (RRI) and BOLD signals of 23 healthy fMRI participants in four resting states by calculation of phase-coupling in the 0.07-0.13 Hz band and determination of positive time delays (pTDs; RRI leading neural BOLD oscillations) and negative time delays (nTDs; RRI lagging behind vascular BOLD oscillations). State anxiety of each subject was assigned to either a low anxiety (LA) or a high anxiety (HA, with most participants exhibiting moderate anxiety symptoms) category based on the inside scanner assessed anxiety score. Results: Although anxiety strongly differed between HA and LA categories, no significant difference was found for nTDs. In contrast, pTDs indicating neural BOLD oscillations exhibited a significant cumulation in the high anxiety category. Conclusions: Findings may suggest that vascular BOLD oscillations related to slow cerebral blood circulation are of about similar intensity during low/no and elevated anxiety. In contrast, neural BOLD oscillations, which might be associated with a central rhythm generating mechanism (pacemaker-like activity), appear to be significantly intensified during elevated anxiety. Significance: The study provides evidence that fMRI-related anxiety can activate a central rhythm generating mechanism very likely located in the brain stem, associated with slow neural BOLD oscillation. (C) 2021 International Federation of Clinical Neurophysiology. Published by Elsevier B.V.
- Find related publications in this database (Keywords)
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Anxiety
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Cardiac-interval oscillations
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fMRI
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Pacemaker-like activity
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Slow BOLD oscillations