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Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI)

Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) uses radio waves and a strong magnetic field to provide images of internal organs and tissues. It does not use X-rays. Functional MRI is a procedure that uses MRI to indirectly measure the neural activity occurring in the brain of humans (or other animals). When neurons are active, they consume oxygen. The local response to this oxygen consumption is an increase in blood flow, localized to the regions of increased neural activity.


Functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI)

This hemodynamic response occurs after a delay of 1 – 5 seconds, lasts several seconds, and leads to local changes in the relative concentration of oxygenated and deoxygenated haemoglobin. As haemoglobin is diamagnetic when oxygenated but paramagnetic when deoxygenated, the MRI signal of blood is slightly different depending on its level of oxygenation. Using an appropriate sequence (often referred to as Blood Oxygenation Level Dependent or BOLD contrast), MRI is capable of measuring that slight difference in magnetic property. Unlike event-related brain potentials, functional MRI has a poor temporal resolution (in the order of seconds), but a high spatial resolution (in the order of millimetres). Therefore, both acquisition methods are complementary.

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Researchers involved

Publications

2011

Can the fMRI responses to physical pain really tell us why social rejection "hurts"?

PNAS

Mouraux A, Iannetti GD.

108(30): E343

2011

A multisensory investigation of the functional significance of the "pain matrix"

Neuroimage

Mouraux A, Diukova A, Lee MC, Wise RG, Iannetti GD.

54(3):2237-49

2010

Clinical, functional and structural determinants of central pain in syringomyelia

Brain

Hatem SM, Attal N, Ducreux D, Gautron M, Parker F, Plaghki L, Bouhassira D.

133(11):3409-22

2010

Increased olfactory bulb volume and olfactory function in early blind subjects

Neuroreport

Rombaux P, Huart C, De Volder AG, Cuevas I, Renier L, Duprez T, Grandin C.

21(17): 1067-1073

2009

Assessment of spinal somatosensory systems with diffusion tensor imaging in syringomyelia

Journal of Neurology Neurosurg Psychiatry

Hatem SM, Attal N, Ducreux D, Gautron M, Parker F, Plaghki L, Bouhassira D.

80(12):1350-1356

2008

PDF

Combining EEG and fMRI in pain research

EEG-fMRI

Iannetti GD, Mouraux A.

L Lemieux, C Mulert, editors. New York: Springer-Verlag

2006

Olfactory function assessed with orthonasal and retronasal testing, olfactory bulb volume, and chemosensory event-related potentials

Arch Otolaryngology - Head and Neck Surgery

Rombaux P, Weitz H, Mouraux A, Nicolas G, Bertrand B, Duprez T, Hummel T.

132(12):1346-1351

Institute of Neuroscience (IONS) - Université catholique de Louvain (UCL)

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NOCIONS : PAIN RESEARCH AT UCLOUVAIN

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