Functional MRI is revolutionizing the way scientists study how our brains work. It is
believed that one day new studies will lead to faster, more accurate diagnoses for many
types of brain disorders and diseases and to treating these maladies effectively. The
studies even may prove a biological basis for psychiatric disorders and abnormalities.
For years, scientists have been able to look at the living
human brain to find tumors, aneurysms and other problems visible in a magnetic resonance
image. But for the past decade, scientists have been able to see, not just what the brain
looks like, but how it functions. Functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) is
revolutionizing the way scientists study how our brains work and what can go wrong. New
studies will one day lead to faster, more accurate diagnoses for many types of brain
disorders and diseases and to effectively treating them. The studies may even prove a
biological basis for psychiatric disorders and abnormalities that so far have eluded
scientists.
High-resolution functional MRI gives researchers the ability to observe our actual
thought processes, and they are finding that the brain is more complex and adaptable than
previously thought. We have beautiful definition of the structure of the brain,
conventionally, but now we can add to that a beautiful definition of the function of the
brain, says Joy Hirsch, Ph.D., director of the fMRI Research Center in the
Department of Radiology at Columbia University (New York). It gives us many more
opportunities and advantages in practicing medicine than what weve had before.
Clinical fMRI
Although much of the work with fMRI is being done by researchers studying how
brains function and dysfunction, neurosurgeons also are turning to fMRI to help remove
previously inoperable brain tumors. Because tumors often cause major structures of the
brain to move, it is difficult for surgeons to know where those structures are in relation
to the tumor. They often decide not to risk surgically removing the tumor for fear of
damaging an important motor or sensory function, such as language.
By using fMRI to determine the location of those functions, surgeons reduce that risk.
When we can identify where the functional motor or language areas are, we can then
assess the risk of a particular surgical procedure based on that information, says
Hirsch. So not only can we assess risk ahead of time, but we can plan the surgical
route so that the chance of morbidity is much reduced.
Please refer to the January 2003 issue for the complete story.
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Martin St. Denis