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Dive into the research topics where Laurentius Huber is active.

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Featured researches published by Laurentius Huber.


NeuroImage | 2015

Cortical lamina-dependent blood volume changes in human brain at 7 T

Laurentius Huber; Jozien Goense; Aneurin J. Kennerley; Robert Trampel; Maria Guidi; Enrico Reimer; Dimo Ivanov; Nicole E. Neef; Claudine Gauthier; Robert Turner; Harald E. Möller

Cortical layer-dependent high (sub-millimeter) resolution functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) in human or animal brain can be used to address questions regarding the functioning of cortical circuits, such as the effect of different afferent and efferent connectivities on activity in specific cortical layers. The sensitivity of gradient echo (GE) blood oxygenation level-dependent (BOLD) responses to large draining veins reduces its local specificity and can render the interpretation of the underlying laminar neural activity impossible. The application of the more spatially specific cerebral blood volume (CBV)-based fMRI in humans has been hindered by the low sensitivity of the noninvasive modalities available. Here, a vascular space occupancy (VASO) variant, adapted for use at high field, is further optimized to capture layer-dependent activity changes in human motor cortex at sub-millimeter resolution. Acquired activation maps and cortical profiles show that the VASO signal peaks in gray matter at 0.8-1.6mm depth, and deeper compared to the superficial and vein-dominated GE-BOLD responses. Validation of the VASO signal change versus well-established iron-oxide contrast agent based fMRI methods in animals showed the same cortical profiles of CBV change, after normalization for lamina-dependent baseline CBV. In order to evaluate its potential of revealing small lamina-dependent signal differences due to modulations of the input-output characteristics, layer-dependent VASO responses were investigated in the ipsilateral hemisphere during unilateral finger tapping. Positive activation in ipsilateral primary motor cortex and negative activation in ipsilateral primary sensory cortex were observed. This feature is only visible in high-resolution fMRI where opposing sides of a sulcus can be investigated independently because of a lack of partial volume effects. Based on the results presented here, we conclude that VASO offers good reproducibility, high sensitivity and lower sensitivity than GE-BOLD to changes in larger vessels, making it a valuable tool for layer-dependent fMRI studies in humans.


Magnetic Resonance in Medicine | 2014

Slab-selective, BOLD-corrected VASO at 7 tesla provides measures of cerebral blood volume reactivity with high signal-to-noise ratio.

Laurentius Huber; Dimo Ivanov; Steffen Krieger; Markus Streicher; Toralf Mildner; Benedikt A. Poser; Harald E. Möller; Robert Turner

MRI methods sensitive to functional changes in cerebral blood volume (CBV) may map neural activity with better spatial specificity than standard functional MRI (fMRI) methods based on blood oxygen level dependent (BOLD) effect. The purpose of this study was to develop and investigate a vascular space occupancy (VASO) method with high sensitivity to CBV changes for use in human brain at 7 Tesla (T).


NeuroImage | 2016

Lamina-dependent calibrated BOLD response in human primary motor cortex

Maria Guidi; Laurentius Huber; Leonie Lampe; Claudine Gauthier; Harald E. Möller

Disentangling neural activity at different cortical depths during a functional task has recently generated growing interest, since this would allow to separate feedforward and feedback activity. The majority of layer-dependent studies have, so far, relied on gradient-recalled echo (GRE) blood-oxygenation-level dependent (BOLD) acquisitions, which are weighted towards the large draining veins at the cortical surface. The current study aims to obtain quantitative brain activity responses in the primary motor cortex on a laminar scale without the contamination due to accompanying secondary vascular effects. Evoked oxidative metabolism was evaluated using the Davis model, to investigate its applicability, advantages, and limits in lamina-dependent fMRI. Average values for the calibration parameter, M, and for changes in the cerebral metabolic rate of oxygen consumption (CMRO2) during a unilateral finger-tapping task were (11±2)% and (30±7)%, respectively, with distinct variation features across the cortical depth. The results presented here showed an uncoupling between BOLD-based functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) and metabolic changes across cortical depth, while the tight coupling between CMRO2 and CBV was conserved across cortical layers. We conclude that the Davis model can help to obtain estimates of lamina-dependent metabolic changes without contamination from large draining veins, with high consistency and reproducibility across participants.


Neuron | 2017

High-Resolution CBV-fMRI Allows Mapping of Laminar Activity and Connectivity of Cortical Input and Output in Human M1

Laurentius Huber; Daniel A. Handwerker; Gang Chen; Andrew Hall; Carsten Stüber; Javier Gonzalez-Castillo; Dimo Ivanov; Sean Marrett; Maria Guidi; Jozien Goense; Benedikt A. Poser; Peter A. Bandettini

Layer-dependent fMRI allows measurements of information flow in cortical circuits, as afferent and efferent connections terminate in different cortical layers. However, it is unknown to what level human fMRI is specific and sensitive enough to reveal directional functional activity across layers. To answer this question, we developed acquisition and analysis methods for blood-oxygen-level-dependent (BOLD) and cerebral-blood-volume (CBV)-based laminar fMRI and used these to discriminate four different tasks in the human motor cortex (M1). In agreement with anatomical data from animal studies, we found evidence for somatosensory and premotor input in superficial layers of M1 and for cortico-spinal motor output in deep layers. Laminar resting-state fMRI showed directional functional connectivity of M1 with somatosensory and premotor areas. Our findings demonstrate that CBV-fMRI can be used to investigate cortical activity in humans with unprecedented detail, allowing investigations of information flow between brain regions and outperforming conventional BOLD results that are often buried under vascular biases.


NeuroImage | 2018

Techniques for blood volume fMRI with VASO: From low-resolution mapping towards sub-millimeter layer-dependent applications.

Laurentius Huber; Dimo Ivanov; Daniel A. Handwerker; Sean Marrett; Maria Guidi; Kâmil Uludağ; Peter A. Bandettini; Benedikt A. Poser

&NA; Quantitative cerebral blood volume (CBV) fMRI has the potential to overcome several specific limitations of BOLD fMRI. It provides direct physiological interpretability and promises superior localization specificity in applications of sub‐millimeter resolution fMRI applications at ultra‐high magnetic fields (7 T and higher). Non‐invasive CBV fMRI using VASO (vascular space occupancy), however, is inherently limited with respect to its data acquisition efficiency, restricting its imaging coverage and achievable spatial and temporal resolution. This limitation may be reduced with recent advanced acceleration and reconstruction strategies that allow two‐dimensional acceleration, such as in simultaneous multi‐slice (SMS) 2D‐EPI or 3D‐EPI in combination with CAIPIRINHA field‐of‐view shifting. In this study, we sought to determine the functional sensitivity and specificity of these readout strategies with VASO over a broad range of spatial resolutions; spanning from low spatial resolution (3 mm) whole‐cortex to sub‐millimeter (0.75 mm) slab‐of‐cortex (for cortical layer‐dependent applications). In the thermal‐noise‐dominated regime of sub‐millimeter resolutions, 3D‐EPI‐VASO provides higher temporal stability and sensitivity to detect changes in CBV compared to 2D‐EPI‐VASO. In this regime, 3D‐EPI‐VASO unveils task activation located in the cortical laminae with little contamination from surface veins, in contrast to the cortical surface weighting of GE‐BOLD fMRI. In the physiological‐noise‐dominated regime of lower resolutions, however, 2D‐SMS‐VASO shows superior performance compared to 3D‐EPI‐VASO. Due to its superior sensitivity at a layer‐dependent level, 3D‐EPI VASO promises to play an important role in future neuroscientific applications of layer‐dependent fMRI. HighlightsLimitations of sub‐millimeter fMRI are discussed.CBV‐sensitive fMRI is combined with 2D and 3D‐sEPI imaging.At ultra‐high resolutions, novel contrast and acquisition schemes are needed.At high‐res: 1.) CBV fMRI outperforms GE‐BOLD 2.) 3D‐EPI outperforms 2D‐EPI.CBV fMRI based on 3D‐EPI allow layer‐dependent fMRI applications.


NeuroImage | 2016

Baseline oxygenation in the brain: Correlation between respiratory-calibration and susceptibility methods.

Audrey P. Fan; Andreas Schäfer; Laurentius Huber; Leonie Lampe; Steffen von Smuda; Harald E. Möller; Arno Villringer; Claudine Joëlle Gauthier

New MRI methods for noninvasive imaging of baseline oxygen extraction fraction (OEF) in the brain show great promise. Quantitative O2 imaging (QUO2) applies a biophysical model to measure OEF in tissue from BOLD, cerebral blood flow (CBF), and end-tidal O2 (ETO2) signals acquired during two or more gas manipulations. Alternatively, quantitative susceptibility mapping (QSM) maps baseline OEF along cerebral vessels based on the deoxyhemoblogin (dHb) susceptibility shift between veins and water. However, these approaches have not been carefully compared to each other or to known physiological signals. The aims of this study were to compare OEF values by QUO2 and QSM; and to see if baseline OEF relates to BOLD and CBF changes during a visual task. Simultaneous BOLD and arterial spin labeling (ASL) scans were acquired at 7T in 11 healthy subjects continuously during hypercapnia (5% CO2, 21% O2), hyperoxia (100% O2), and carbogen (5% CO2, 95% O2) for QUO2 analysis. Separate BOLD-ASL scans were acquired during a checkerboard stimulus to identify functional changes in the visual cortex. Gradient echo phase images were also collected at rest for QSM reconstruction of OEF along cerebral veins draining the visual cortex. Mean baseline OEF was (43.5±14)% for QUO2 with two gases, (42.3±17)% for QUO2 with three gases, and (29.4±3)% for QSM across volunteers. Three-gas QUO2 values of OEF correlated with QSM values of OEF (P=0.03). However, Bland-Altman analysis revealed that QUO2 tended to measure higher baseline OEF with respect to QSM, which likely results from underestimation of the hyperoxic BOLD signal and low signal-to-noise ratio of the ASL acquisitions. Across subjects, the percent CBF change during the visual task correlated with OEF measured by 3-gas QUO2 (P<0.04); and by QSM (P=0.035), providing evidence that the new methods measure true variations in brain physiology across subjects.


NeuroImage | 2016

Functional cerebral blood volume mapping with simultaneous multi-slice acquisition

Laurentius Huber; Dimo Ivanov; Maria Guidi; Robert Turner; Kamil Uludag; Harald E. Möller; Benedikt A. Poser

The aim of this study is to overcome the current limits of brain coverage available with multi-slice echo planar imaging (EPI) for vascular space occupancy (VASO) mapping. By incorporating simultaneous multi-slice (SMS) EPI image acquisition into slice-saturation slab-inversion VASO (SS-SI VASO), many more slices can be acquired for non-invasive functional measurements of blood volume responses. Blood-volume-weighted VASO and gradient echo blood oxygenation level-dependent (GE-BOLD) data were acquired in humans at 7T with a 32-channel head coil. SMS-VASO was applied in three scenarios: A) high-resolution acquisition of spatially distant brain areas in the visuo-motor network (V1/V5/M1/S1); B) high-resolution acquisition of an imaging slab covering the entire M1/S1 hand regions; and C) low-resolution acquisition with near whole-brain coverage. The results show that the SMS-VASO sequence provided images enabling robust detection of blood volume changes in up to 20 slices with signal readout durations shorter than 150ms. High-resolution application of SMS-VASO revealed improved specificity of VASO to GM tissue without contamination from large draining veins compared to GE-BOLD in the visual cortex and in the sensory-motor cortex. It is concluded that VASO fMRI with SMS-EPI allows obtaining a reasonable three-dimensional coverage not achievable with standard VASO during the short time period when blood magnetization is approximately nulled. Due to the increased brain coverage and better spatial specificity to GM tissue of VASO compared to GE-BOLD signal, the proposed method may play an important role in high-resolution human fMRI at 7T.


NeuroImage | 2014

Regional reproducibility of calibrated BOLD functional MRI: Implications for the study of cognition and plasticity

Steffen Krieger; Claudine Gauthier; Dimo Ivanov; Laurentius Huber; Elisabeth Roggenhofer; Bernhard Sehm; Robert Turner; Gary F. Egan

Calibrated BOLD fMRI is a promising alternative to the classic BOLD contrast due to its reduced venous sensitivity and greater physiological specificity. The delayed adoption of this technique for cognitive studies may stem partly from a lack of information on the reproducibility of these measures in the context of cognitive tasks. In this study we have explored the applicability and reproducibility of a state-of-the-art calibrated BOLD technique using a complex functional task at 7 tesla. Reproducibility measures of BOLD, CBF, CMRO2 flow-metabolism coupling n and the calibration parameter M were compared and interpreted for three ROIs. We found an averaged intra-subject variation of CMRO2 of 8% across runs and 33% across days. BOLD (46% across runs, 36% across days), CBF (33% across runs, 46% across days) and M (41% across days) showed significantly higher intra-subject variability. Inter-subject variability was found to be high for all quantities, though CMRO2 was the most consistent across brain regions. The results of this study provide evidence that calibrated BOLD may be a viable alternative for longitudinal and cognitive MRI studies.


NeuroImage | 2016

Vascular autorescaling of fMRI (VasA fMRI) improves sensitivity of population studies: A pilot study

Samira M. Kazan; Siawoosh Mohammadi; Martina F. Callaghan; Guillaume Flandin; Laurentius Huber; Robert Leech; Aneurin J. Kennerley; Christian Windischberger; Nikolaus Weiskopf

The blood oxygenation level-dependent (BOLD) signal is widely used for functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) of brain function in health and disease. The statistical power of fMRI group studies is significantly hampered by high inter-subject variance due to differences in baseline vascular physiology. Several methods have been proposed to account for physiological vascularization differences between subjects and hence improve the sensitivity in group studies. However, these methods require the acquisition of additional reference scans (such as a full resting-state fMRI session or ASL-based calibrated BOLD). We present a vascular autorescaling (VasA) method, which does not require any additional reference scans. VasA is based on the observation that slow oscillations (< 0.1 Hz) in arterial blood CO2 levels occur naturally due to changes in respiration patterns. These oscillations yield fMRI signal changes whose amplitudes reflect the blood oxygenation levels and underlying local vascularization and vascular responsivity. VasA estimates proxies of the amplitude of these CO2-driven oscillations directly from the residuals of task-related fMRI data without the need for reference scans. The estimates are used to scale the amplitude of task-related fMRI responses, to account for vascular differences. The VasA maps compared well to cerebrovascular reactivity (CVR) maps and cerebral blood volume maps based on vascular space occupancy (VASO) measurements in four volunteers, speaking to the physiological vascular basis of VasA. VasA was validated in a wide variety of tasks in 138 volunteers. VasA increased t-scores by up to 30% in specific brain areas such as the visual cortex. The number of activated voxels was increased by up to 200% in brain areas such as the orbital frontal cortex while still controlling the nominal false-positive rate. VasA fMRI outperformed previously proposed rescaling approaches based on resting-state fMRI data and can be readily applied to any task-related fMRI data set, even retrospectively.


Magnetic Resonance in Medicine | 2014

Anatomical brain imaging at 7T using two-dimensional GRASE

Robert Trampel; Enrico Reimer; Laurentius Huber; Dimo Ivanov; Robin M. Heidemann; Andreas Schäfer; Robert Turner

Specific absorption rate is a serious problem at high field strengths, especially for sequences involving many high power radiofrequency pulses, such as turbo spin echo (TSE). GRASE (gradient and spin echo) may overcome this problem by omitting a certain number of refocusing pulses of a TSE sequence, and replacing them with segmented echo‐planar imaging readouts.

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Peter A. Bandettini

National Institutes of Health

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Daniel A. Handwerker

National Institutes of Health

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