An fMRI study indicating increased cortical recruitment during a cognitive interference task in Huntington's disease patients


Autoria(s): Georgiou-Karistianis, N.; Sritharan, A.; Farrow, M.; Bradshaw, J. L.; Churchyard, A.; Chiu, E.; Chua, P.; Stout, J.; Cunnington, R.; Egan, G.
Data(s)

01/01/2005

Resumo

We used an event related fMRI design to study the BOLD response in Huntington’s disease (HD) patients during performance of a Simon interference task. We hypothesised that HD patients will demonstrate significantly slower RTs than controls, and that there will be significant differences in the pattern of brain activation between groups. Seventeen HD patients and 15 age and sex matched controls were scanned using 3T GE scanner (FOV = 24 cm2; TE = 40 ms; TR = 3 s; FA = 60°; slice thickness = 6 mm; in-plane resolution = 1.88x1.88 mm2). The task involved two activation conditions, namely congruent (for example, left pointing arrow appearing on the left side of the screen) and incongruent (for example, left pointing arrow appearing on the right side of the screen), and a baseline condition. Each stimulus was presented for 2500 ms followed by a blank screen for 500 ms. Subjects were instructed to press a button using the same hand as indicated by the direction of the arrow head and were given 3000 ms to respond. Data analysis was performed using SPM2 with a random effects analysis model. For each subject parameter estimates for combined task conditions (congruent and incongruent combined) were calculated. Comparisons such as these, based on block designs, have superior statistical power for detecting subtle changes in the BOLD response anywhere in the brain. The activations reported are significant at PFDR_corr

Identificador

http://espace.library.uq.edu.au/view/UQ:55990

Idioma(s)

eng

Publicador

BMJ Publishing

Palavras-Chave #Clinical Neurology #Psychiatry #Surgery #fMRI #cognition #neuropsychology #1701 Psychology
Tipo

Conference Paper