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© Peter B. Barker, Xavier Golay, and Greg Zaharchuk 2013. It is well known that elevated neuronal activity is accompanied by increased glucose and oxygen delivery to tissue. As these substrates are delivered to the tissue by the blood, changes in cerebral blood flow (CBF), or perfusion, are also closely associated with modulations in neuronal activity. Thus, information regarding brain function can be obtained from measurements of CBF, and corresponding measurements of hemodynamic activity have emerged as the most popular approach for assessing changes in brain function [1–4]. CBF, defined in Chapters 1 and 3, is the rate at which the blood is delivered to tissue (generally reported in units of ml blood/100 g tissue/min), as opposed to the quantity or velocity of blood in vessels. It is known that functionally driven changes in hemodynamic activity are associated with complex cerebrovascular interactions between perivascular neurons, glio-vascular and intramural vascular signaling; however, the precise mechanisms by which neuronal activity elicits changes in CBF have not been fully established [5].

Original publication

DOI

10.1017/CBO9781139004053.009

Type

Chapter

Book title

Clinical Perfusion MRI: Techniques and Applications

Publication Date

01/01/2010

Volume

9781107013391

Pages

103 - 126