慢速的发现——DC-MEG研究的最新进展。

B M Mackert
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引用次数: 0

摘要

频率范围小于0.1 Hz的直流(DC)现象的非侵入性电记录,例如,在中风或偏头痛中发生的脑细胞代谢损伤(缺氧去极化,梗死周围去极化,扩散性抑制),由于电极-皮肤界面的电化学不稳定性引起的大漂移假影,在技术上受到限制。这一限制只能通过侵入性入路来克服。然而,早在1969年,在这个频率范围内的第一个磁场已经被记录在人体躯干上,通过使用跷跷板在磁场探测器前垂直振荡受试者。通过这种技术,直流场被转换成一个更高的频率,在那里外部噪声水平更小。在过去的十年中,基于调制的直流脑磁图(DC-MEG)已经得到了系统的改进,可以监测这个频率域的低振幅磁场,这些磁场不仅来自于受伤的组织,也来自于功能性皮层激活。此外,DC-MEG和近红外光谱(NIRS)的结合为研究皮层神经血管耦合开辟了一条新的途径,因为血管和神经元的激活可以同时分析,即使在单次试验模式下也不需要平均。在新型磁屏蔽室(柏林物理技术联邦研究中心BMSR-2)内的记录显示,在直流频率范围内具有极低的背景噪声水平,减轻了传感器到源调制的需要,允许另外解决神经元直流过程的短期(亚秒)动态。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The discovery of slowness--recent progress in DC-MEG research.

The non-invasive electrical recording of Direct Current (DC) phenomena in the frequency range below 0.1 Hz, e.g., occurring in metabolic injuries to brain cells in stroke or migraine (anoxic depolarization, peri-infarct depolarization, spreading depression), is technically restricted due to large drift artifacts caused by electrochemical instabilities at the electrode-skin interface. This limitation could be overcome by invasive approaches only. However, as early as 1969 first magnetic fields in this frequency range have been recorded over the human torso by oscillating the subject vertically in front of a magnetic field detector using a see-saw. By this technique the DC field is conversed to a higher frequency, where the external noise level is less. In the last decade, the modulation based DC-magnetoencephalography (DC-MEG) has been methodically refined, which allowed monitoring low-amplitude magnetic fields in this frequency domain arising not only from injured tissue, but also generated by functional cortical activation. Furthermore, the combination of DC-MEG and NearInfraRed Spectroscopy (NIRS) opens up a new avenue to study cortical neurovascular coupling, as vascular and neuronal activations could be analyzed simultaneously even without averaging in a single-trial mode. Recordings inside the novel magnetically shielded room (BMSR-2 of the Physikalisch-Technische Bundesanstalt, Berlin) exhibiting an extremely low background noise level in the DC frequency range, and alleviating the need of sensor-to-source modulation, allow to resolve additionally the short-term (subsecond) dynamics of neuronal DC-processes.

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