RT Journal Article SR Electronic T1 Simple fMRI Postprocessing Suffices for Normal Clinical Practice JF American Journal of Neuroradiology JO Am. J. Neuroradiol. FD American Society of Neuroradiology SP 1188 OP 1193 DO 10.3174/ajnr.A3381 VO 34 IS 6 A1 González-Ortiz, S. A1 Oleaga, L. A1 Pujol, T. A1 Medrano, S. A1 Rumiá, J. A1 Caral, L. A1 Boget, T. A1 Capellades, J. A1 Bargalló, N. YR 2013 UL http://www.ajnr.org/content/34/6/1188.abstract AB BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: Whereas fMRI postprocessing tools used in research are accurate but unwieldy, those used for clinical practice are user-friendly but are less accurate. We aimed to determine whether commercial software for fMRI postprocessing is accurate enough for clinical practice. METHODS: Ten volunteers underwent fMRI while performing motor and language tasks (hand, foot, and orolingual movements; verbal fluency; semantic judgment; and oral comprehension). We compared visual concordance, image quality (noise), voxel size, and radiologist preference for the activation maps obtained by using Neuro3D software (provided with our MR imaging scanner) and by using the SPM program commonly used in research. RESULTS: Maps obtained with the 2 methods were classified as “partially overlapping” for 70% for motor and 72% for language paradigm experiments and as “overlapping” in 30% of motor and in 15% of language paradigm experiments. CONCLUSIONS: fMRI is a helpful and robust tool in clinical practice for planning neurosurgery. Widely available commercial fMRI software can provide reliable information for therapeutic management, so sophisticated, less widely available software is unnecessary in most cases. LIlaterality indexTmaxmaximal TTththreshold T