Title: Hippocampal Blood Flow after Twenty Minutes of Moderate-intensity Exercise
Citation
Steventon JJ, Foster C, Furby H, et al. (2019). Hippocampal Blood Flow after Twenty Minutes of Moderate-intensity Exercise. Cardiff University. https://doi.org/10.17035/d.2019.0070728670
Access Rights: Data can be made freely available subject to attribution
Access Method: Click to email a request for this data to opendata@cardiff.ac.uk
Cardiff University Dataset Creators
Dataset Details
Publisher: Cardiff University
Date (year) of data becoming publicly available: 2019
Data format: .nii, .txt, .m, .r, .sh
Software Required: MRI data visualisation software (e.g. AFNI, FSLview)
R to view statistical analysis code in r
Matlab
Estimated total storage size of dataset: Less than 100 megabytes
Number of Files In Dataset: 350
DOI : 10.17035/d.2019.0070728670
DOI URL: http://doi.org/10.17035/d.2019.0070728670
Related URL: http://www.enroll-hd.org
In this study we investigated whether a single session of moderate-intensity exercise was sufficient to induce changes in the cerebral vasculature using magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). We employed arterial spin labelling MRI to measure global and regional cerebral blood flow and arterial transit time before and after 20-minutes of cycling in healthy adults with 3 post-exercise timepoints (post1, post2, post3). The blood vessels’ ability to dilate, measured by cerebrovascular reactivity (CVR) to CO2inhalation, was measured at baseline and 25-minutes post-exercise. Along with the raw ASL data at baseline and at the 3 post-exercise timepoints, whole brain cerebral blood flow maps, arterial transit time maps, CVR maps, and R2 maps showing the CVR fitting to CO2 are provided; for each map type, 4 images are provided for each participant (n=32) for the 4 separate timepoints (baseline, post1, post2, post3). Bash scripts and Matlab code used for the pre-processing of the dataset are provided and R code and bash scripts show the statistical analysis undertaken. A README.txt file details which order the various scripts should be run in to produce the whole-brain maps. Research results based upon these data are published at https://doi.org/10.1093/cercor/bhz104
Description
Keywords
functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI), hippocampus
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