Spatiotemporal cerebral blood flow dynamics underlies emergence of the limbic-sensorimotor-association cortical gradient in human infancy.
Hao HuangJohn DetreJessica HylandKay SindabizeraEmily KuschnerJ EdgarYun PengMinhui OuyangPublished in: Research square (2024)
Infant cerebral blood flow (CBF) delivers nutrients and oxygen to fulfill brain energy consumption requirements for the fastest period of postnatal brain development across the lifespan. However, organizing principle of whole-brain CBF dynamics during infancy remains obscure. Leveraging a unique cohort of 100 + infants with high-resolution arterial spin labeled MRI, we found the emergence of the cortical hierarchy revealed by the highest-resolution infant CBF maps available to date. Infant CBF across cortical regions increased in a biphasic pattern with initial rapid and sequentially slower rate, with break-point ages increasing along the limbic-sensorimotor-association cortical gradient. Increases in CBF in sensorimotor cortices were associated with enhanced language and motor skills, and frontoparietal association cortices for cognitive skills. The study discovered emergence of the hierarchical limbic-sensorimotor-association cortical gradient in infancy, and offers standardized reference of infant brain CBF and insight into the physiological basis of cortical specialization and real-world infant developmental functioning.
Keyphrases
- resting state
- functional connectivity
- cerebral blood flow
- white matter
- high resolution
- endothelial cells
- weight gain
- cerebral ischemia
- magnetic resonance imaging
- computed tomography
- heavy metals
- physical activity
- single molecule
- risk assessment
- pet imaging
- brain injury
- high speed
- blood brain barrier
- induced pluripotent stem cells