Functional MRI of Human Olfaction
- 1 November 1997
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wolters Kluwer Health in Journal of Computer Assisted Tomography
- Vol. 21 (6) , 849-856
- https://doi.org/10.1097/00004728-199711000-00002
Abstract
Our goal was to use functional MRI (fMRI) to measure brain activation in response to olfactory stimuli. fMRI brain scans were obtained in 17 normal subjects (9 men, 8 women) using multislice FLASH MRI in response to three olfactory stimuli (pyridine, menthone, amyl acetate) in three coronal brain sections selected from anterior to posterior temporal brain regions. Activation images were derived using correlation analysis, and ratios of areas of brain activated to total brain areas were calculated. Activation was present in each section in all subjects. Subjective estimation of vapor intensity followed relative vapor pressure of stimuli presented (pyridine > amyl acetate > menthone) and were similar for both men and women. However, brain activation did not follow subjective responsiveness order but rather pyridine > menthone > amyl acetate, a pattern demonstrated by both men and women. Brain activation in women was consistently lower than in men for all vapors in all brain sections, although regions of activation did not differ. Activation occurred in regions previously recognized as associated with olfactory stimulation, including orbitofrontal and entorhinal cortex; however, extensive regions within frontal cortex including cingulate gyrus were also activated. Brain regions activated to odors considered pleasant or unpleasant did not differ. The techniques used in this study demonstrated that brain activation to olfactory stimuli could be measured quantitatively such that differences between groups of subjects (in this case men and women) could be compared. Although localization of brain activation was not the major thrust of this study, activation to olfactory stimuli was found not only in brain regions previously associated with processing of olfactory information but also in several other areas of frontal cortex, in cingulate gyrus, and in several components of the limbic system. This is the first study in which activation in human brain parenchyma of normal humans to olfactory stimuli has been quantitated by fMRI.Keywords
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