Sensitizing Task-fMRI Signals in Aging task designs is necessary to improve the stability of predicting associated behavior. In summary, we recommend correction of task fMRI signals by covarying out baseline CBF especially when comparing groups with different neurovascular properties. Given that ASL and BOLD fMRI are well established and widely employed techniques, our proposed multi-modal methodology can be readily implemented into data processing pipelines to obtain more accurate BOLD activation maps.
Objective The past 25 years have seen profound changes in neurocognitive rehabilitation and that continue to motivate its evolution. Although the concept of nervous system plasticity was discussed by William James (1890), the foundation for experience-based plasticity had not reached the critical empirical mass to seriously impact rehabilitation research until after 1992. The objective of this review is to describe how the emergence of neural plasticity has changed neurocognitive rehabilitation research. Method The important developments included (a) introduction of a widely available tool that could measure brain plasticity (i.e., fMRI), (b) development of new structural imaging techniques that could define limits of and opportunities for neural plasticity, (c) deployment of non-invasive brain stimulation to leverage neural plasticity for rehabilitation, (d) growth of a literature indicating that exercise has positively impacts neural plasticity, especially for older persons, and (e) enhancement neural plasticity by creating interventions that generalize beyond the boundaries of treatment activities. Given the massive literature, each of these areas is developed by example. Results The expanding influence of neural plasticity has provided new models and tools for neurocognitive rehabilitation in neural injuries and disorders, as well as methods for measuring neural plasticity and predicting its limits and opportunities. Early clinical trials have provided very encouraging results. Conclusion Now that neural plasticity has gained a firm foothold, it will continue to influence the evolution of neurocognitive rehabilitation research for the next 25 years and advance rehabilitation for neural injuries and disease.
Introduction In posterior fossa tumor survivors, lower white matter integrity (WMI) in the right cerebellar-left frontal pathway has been well documented and appears to be related to proximity to the cerebellum, radiation treatment, as well as time since treatment in both cranial radiation and surgery-only treatment groups. The current study investigated theories of transneural degeneration following cerebellar tumor resection that may underlie or relate to reductions in WMI and regional brain volumes using correlations. We hypothesized a positive relationship between the volume of the right cerebellum and known white matter output pathways, as well as with the volume of structures that receive cerebellar projections along the pathway. Methods Adult survivors of childhood brain tumors were recruited ( n = 29; age, M = 22 years, SD = 5; 45% female). Age- and gender-matched controls were also included ( n = 29). Participants completed 3 T diffusion-weighted and T1 MPRAGE MRI scans. Brain structure volume relative to intracranial vault served as regional volumetric measures. Fractional anisotropy (FA) and radial diffusivity (RD) served as WMI measures. In the survivor group, partial correlations between WMI and regional volume included controlling for disease severity. Results In posterior fossa tumor survivors, the volumes of the cerebellum, thalamus, and frontal lobe were correlated with WMI of the thalamic-frontal segment of the cerebellar-frontal pathway ( r = 0.41–0.49, p < .05). Cerebellar atrophy was correlated with reduced WMI in the cerebellar-rubral segment (FA, r = −0.32 p > .05; RD, r = 0.53, p < .01). In the no-radiation survivor group, the regional volume of each structure along the pathway was associated with WMI in the cerebellar-rubral segment. In the radiation survivor group, significant correlations were found between the regional brain volume of each structure and the thalamic-frontal segment of the pathway. Discussion The results of this multimodal neuroimaging study provide correlational evidence that the mechanism of injury subsequent to brain tumor treatment may be different depending on type of treatment(s). Without radiation, the primary mechanism of injury is cerebellar tumor growth, resection, and hydrocephalus. Therefore, the most proximal connection to that injury (cerebellar-rubral pathway) was correlated with reductions in volume along the pathway. In contrast, the survivor group treated with radiation may have had possible radiation-induced demyelination of the thalamic-frontal portion of the pathway, based on a strong correlation with volume loss in the cerebellum, red nucleus, thalamus, and frontal lobe.
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