Twelfth Annual Grant Winners 2011-2012
Title: Early Detection of Aging Related Alterations in Endogenous Brain Fluctuations
Dean:
Don Rosenblum, PhD (FAR)
Anthony Silvagni, DO, PharmD (HPD-OST)
Faculty and Students:
Evan Haskell, PhD (FAR)
Siddharth Pandya, DO (HPD-OST)
Naushira Pandya, MD, CMD (HPD-OST)
Rajeswari Murugan (FAR)
Abstract:
Neurodegenerative disorders such as Alzheimer's disease and vascular dementia contribute a major portion of
the rising health care costs in aging populations and adversely effect the quality of life of aging populations. The growing
prevalence of dementia in the population underscores the need to develop new tools for early diagnosis and treatment
before the neural damage becomes irreversible. Recently fMRI has begun to be utilized as a technique for measuring the
endogenous activity of the brain. Understanding the relationship between alterations in neurophysiological mechanisms
and connectivity and fMRI measurement due to aging can potentially assist in early diagnosis and treatment of abnormal
brain function prior to significant tissue damage resulting in significant improvement in the likelihood of positive
outcomes. The coherent spatio-temporal patterns supported by the brain that are revealed by fMRI provide an opportunity
for true interdisciplinary study of global brain behavior and alterations due to natural processes of aging and pathological
functional abnormalities and diseases. We will develop a mathematical/computational model relating the short and long
range interconnectivity of neural networks to the measured fMRI output to explore the functional role of
neurophysiological mechanisms and connectivity in fMRI measurements. The resulting data from this model will be
interpreted and analyzed by a professional radiologist and clinician to gain new insight into early detection of brain
pathology and other functional abnormalities. The exploration of short and long range communication in neural networks
is a very promising area of research that is best approached through an interdisciplinary collaboration. The future impact
of such research includes the development of new tools for early diagnosis and treatment of functional abnormalities of
the brain such as the tools that we develop in this project.
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