Keyword search (4,163 papers available)

"Dagher A" Authored Publications:

Title Authors PubMed ID
1 Mapping cerebral blood perfusion and its links to multi-scale brain organization across the human lifespan Farahani A; Liu ZQ; Ceballos EG; Hansen JY; Wennberg K; Zeighami Y; Dadar M; Gauthier CJ; Dagher A; Misic B; 40729400
PHYSICS
2 A multimodal neuroimaging study of youth at risk for substance use disorders: Functional magnetic resonance imaging and [18F]fallypride positron emission tomography Nikolic M; Cox SML; Jaworska N; Castellanos-Ryan N; Dagher A; Vitaro F; Brendgen M; Parent S; Boivin M; Côté S; Tremblay RE; Séguin JR; Leyton M; 39725679
CSBN
3 A dataset of multi-contrast unbiased average MRI templates of a Parkinson's disease population Madge V; Fonov VS; Xiao Y; Zou L; Jackson C; Postuma RB; Dagher A; Fon EA; Collins DL; 37213552
IMAGING
4 Correspondence between gene expression and neurotransmitter receptor and transporter density in the human brain Hansen JY; Markello RD; Tuominen L; Nørgaard M; Kuzmin E; Palomero-Gallagher N; Dagher A; Misic B; 36209794
CSBN
5 Normal cognition in Parkinson's disease may involve hippocampal cholinergic compensation: An exploratory PET imaging study with [(18)F]-FEOBV Legault-Denis C; Aghourian M; Soucy JP; Rosa-Neto P; Dagher A; Aumont E; Wickens R; Bedard MA; 34628195
PERFORM
6 Cocaine cue-induced mesocorticolimbic activation in cocaine users: Effects of personality traits, lifetime drug use, and acute stimulant ingestion D' Amour-Horvat V; Cox SML; Dagher A; Kolivakis T; Jaworska N; Leyton M; 34463411
CSBN
7 mGlu5 receptor availability in youth at risk for addictions: effects of vulnerability traits and cannabis use. Cox SML, Tippler M, Jaworska N, Smart K, Castellanos-Ryan N, Durand F, Allard D, Benkelfat C, Parent S, Dagher A, Vitaro F, Boivin M, Pihl RO, Côté S, Tremblay RE, Séguin JR, Leyton M 32413893
CSBN
8 Extra-striatal D2/3 receptor availability in youth at risk for addiction. Jaworska N, Cox SML, Tippler M, Castellanos-Ryan N, Benkelfat C, Parent S, Dagher A, Vitaro F, Boivin M, Pihl RO, Côté SM, Tremblay RE, Séguin JR, Leyton M 32259831
CSBN
9 Cocaine cue-induced dopamine release in the human prefrontal cortex. Milella MS, Fotros A, Gravel P, Casey KF, Larcher K, Verhaeghe JA, Cox SM, Reader AJ, Dagher A, Benkelfat C, Leyton M 26900792
CSBN
10 Cyberinfrastructure for Open Science at the Montreal Neurological Institute. Das S, Glatard T, Rogers C, Saigle J, Paiva S, MacIntyre L, Safi-Harab M, Rousseau ME, Stirling J, Khalili-Mahani N, MacFarlane D, Kostopoulos P, Rioux P, Madjar C, Lecours-Boucher X, Vanamala S, Adalat R, Mohaddes Z, Fonov VS, Milot S, Leppert I, Degroot C, Durcan TM, Campbell T, Moreau J, Dagher A, Collins DL, Karamchandani J, Bar-Or A, Fon EA, Hoge R, Baillet S, Rouleau G, Evans AC 28111547
IMAGING
11 Dopamine cross-sensitization between psychostimulant drugs and stress in healthy male volunteers. Booij L, Welfeld K, Leyton M, Dagher A, Boileau I, Sibon I, Baker GB, Diksic M, Soucy JP, Pruessner JC, Cawley-Fiset E, Casey KF, Benkelfat C 26905412
PSYCHOLOGY

 

Title:Mapping cerebral blood perfusion and its links to multi-scale brain organization across the human lifespan
Authors:Farahani ALiu ZQCeballos EGHansen JYWennberg KZeighami YDadar MGauthier CJDagher AMisic B
Link:https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/40729400/
DOI:10.1371/journal.pbio.3003277
Publication:PLoS biology
Keywords:
PMID:40729400 Category: Date Added:2025-07-29
Dept Affiliation: PHYSICS
1 Montréal Neurological Institute, McGill University, Montréal, Québec, Canada.
2 Douglas Mental Health Institute, McGill University, Montréal, Québec, Canada.
3 Department of Physics, Concordia University, Montréal, Québec, Canada.
4 Montréal Heart Institute, Montréal, Québec, Canada.

Description:

Blood perfusion delivers oxygen and nutrients to all cells, making it a fundamental feature of brain organization. How cerebral blood perfusion maps onto micro-, meso- and macro-scale brain structure and function is therefore a key question in neuroscience. Here we analyze pseudo-continuous arterial spin labeling (ASL) data from [Formula: see text] healthy individuals in the HCP Lifespan studies (5-22 and 36-100 years) to reconstruct a high-resolution normative cerebral blood perfusion map. At the cellular and molecular level, cerebral blood perfusion co-localizes with granular layer IV, biological pathways for maintenance of cellular relaxation potential and mitochondrial organization, and with neurotransmitter and neuropeptide receptors involved in vasomodulation. At the regional level, blood perfusion aligns with cortical arealization and is greatest in regions with high metabolic demand and resting-state functional hubs. Looking across individuals, blood perfusion is dynamic throughout the lifespan, follows micro-architectural changes in development, and maps onto individual differences in physiological changes in aging. In addition, we find that cortical atrophy in multiple neurodegenerative diseases (late-onset Alzheimer's disease, TDP-43C, and dementia with Lewy bodies) is most pronounced in regions with lower perfusion, highlighting the utility of perfusion topography as an indicator of transdiagnostic vulnerability. Finally, we show that ASL-derived perfusion can be used to delineate arterial territories in a data-driven manner, providing insights into how the vascular system is linked to human brain function. Collectively, this work highlights how cerebral blood perfusion is central to, and interlinked with, multiple structural and functional systems in the brain.





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