J Neuroimaging. 2011 Jan;21(1):16-23 doi: 10.1111/j.1552-6569.2009.00402.x.

Determination of hemispheric dominance with mental rotation using functional transcranial Doppler sonography and FMRI

Hattemer K, Plate A, Heverhagen JT, Haag A, Keil B, Klein KM, Hermsen A, Oertel WH, Hamer HM, Rosenow F, Knake S.

Abstract

BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: the aim of this study was to investigate specific activation patterns and potential gender differences during mental rotation and to investigate whether functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) and functional transcranial Doppler sonography (fTCD) lateralize hemispheric dominance concordantly.
METHODS: regional brain activation and hemispheric dominance during mental rotation (cube perspective test) were investigated in 10 female and 10 male healthy subjects using fMRI and fTCD.
RESULTS: significant activation was found in the superior parietal lobe, at the parieto-occipital border, in the middle and superior frontal gyrus bilaterally, and the right inferior frontal gyrus using fMRI. Men showed a stronger lateralization to the right hemisphere during fMRI and a tendency toward stronger right-hemispheric activation during fTCD. Furthermore, more activation in frontal and parieto-occipital regions of the right hemisphere was observed using fMRI. Hemispheric dominance for mental rotation determined by the 2 methods correlated well (P= .008), but did not show concordant results in every single subject.
CONCLUSIONS: the neural basis of mental rotation depends on a widespread bilateral network. Hemispheric dominance for mental rotation determined by fMRI and fTCD, though correlating well, is not always concordant. Hemispheric lateralization of complex cortical functions such as spatial rotation therefore should be investigated using multimodal imaging approaches, especially if used clinically as a tool for the presurgical evaluation of patients undergoing neurosurgery.

PMID: 19659683