Functional magnetic resonance imaging of the cortical response to photic stimulation in humans following optic neuritis recovery
- PMID: 12270641
- DOI: 10.1016/s0304-3940(02)00700-0
Functional magnetic resonance imaging of the cortical response to photic stimulation in humans following optic neuritis recovery
Abstract
Recovery from optic neuritis has been shown to be associated with an abnormal functional MRI (fMRI) response following exposure of the eye to an epoch based (ON-OFF design) flickering photic stimulus. Visual cortex activation is reduced during photic stimulation, whilst extra-occipital areas are extensively activated with a peak blood oxygen level dependent response during the OFF phase of the stimulus paradigm. We performed a further fMRI experiment to determine whether the abnormal extra-occipital response is a phase-specific phenomenon or whether it results from a delayed haemodynamic response. A cohort of patients that recovered from optic neuritis was studied, this time using a longer photic stimulation epoch (40 s). The extra-occipital response again peaked during the baseline condition, indicating that the phenomenon is phase dependent. Our results also reinforce the important findings of extra-occipital activation following optic neuritis which may represent an adaptive reorganization of the cerebral response.
Copyright 2002 Elsevier Science Ltd.
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