Gov’t to establish national schizophrenia brain image database

Brain images from hundreds of people with schizophrenia at 10 research sites nationwide will be shared in a first-of-its-kind research project funded by the National Center for Research Resources (NCRR), a branch of the National Institutes of Health. The project will create an extensive database of brain information that it is hoped will expand understanding of disabling brain illnesses such as schizophrenia and speed the development of new treatments.From the University of California at San Diego:BRAIN IMAGES FROM PATIENTS WITH SCHIZOPHRENIA WILL BE SHARED IN FIRST NATIONWIDE IMAGING NETWORK

Brain images from hundreds of people with schizophrenia at 10 research sites nationwide will be shared in a first-of-its-kind research project funded with $10.9 million from the National Center for Research Resources (NCRR), a branch of the National Institutes of Health.

The project will create an extensive and unique database of brain information that is expected to expand our understanding of disabling brain illnesses such as schizophrenia and speed the development of new treatments.

The federal grant was awarded to the joint General Clinical Research Center (GCRC) of University of California, San Diego (UCSD) and the University of California, Irvine (UC Irvine). The GCRC will coordinate the nationwide effort to link and share vast amounts of computerized data from brain images of people who have schizophrenia. In addition, researchers participating in the project will create standardized, powerful discovery tools for future brain studies in large populations.

Although brain imaging technology has generated remarkable progress in understanding how mental and neurological diseases develop, it has been nearly impossible for one laboratory to share and compare findings with other labs. A lack of coordinated networks for sharing data, plus limitations in compatible computer hardware, software and imaging equipment, have isolated scientists, barring them from collaborative efforts that could provide the large database of brain images needed for a comprehensive look at brain dysfunction.

The newly funded project will utilize a nationally linked, high-speed computer network established by the Biomedical Informatics Research Network (BIRN), a consortium of U.S. universities that received their initial funding from the NCRR in 2001. During the past year, BIRN has utilized the new Internet 2 network and broad-band networking technologies to link several sites in the United States. With this new technology, scientists will distribute and share brain imaging data, including high-resolution digital magnetic resonance images (MRI) of brain structure and function, advanced 3-D microscope images, and related genomic, structural and gene expression data.

Steven G. Potkin, M.D., UCI professor of psychiatry, will lead the new three-year investigation.

“This grant allows a diverse group of researchers across the country to develop new methods to combine unique brain imaging data obtained at different centers,” Potkin said. “This grant will find new ways to conduct very large imaging experiments and ease the exchange of data among researchers, not just in schizophrenia but eventually in a whole range of brain disorders and other diseases.”

Sites and investigators participating in the new study are UCI (led by Potkin), UCSD (led by Gregory Brown) UCLA (led by Arthur Toga), Stanford University (led by Gary Glover), University of New Mexico (led by John Lauriello), University of Minnesota (led by Kelvin Lim), Massachusetts General Hospital (led by Bruce Rosen) with Brigham and Women’s Hospital (led by Ron Kikinis), Duke University (led by Gregory McCarthy), University of North Carolina (led by Jeffrey Lieberman) and University of Iowa (led by Daniel O’Leary).

More information on BIRN is available at http://www.nbirn.net/, and FIRST BIRN at http://www.nbirn.net/Projects/Function/Background.pdf

The massive FIRST BIRN project will consist of two stages:

Researchers at UC Irvine and UCSD will create a centralized database that is easily accessed by researchers, regardless of their physical location or type of laboratory technology. Led by Mark Ellisman, UCSD professor of neurosciences and director of the BIRN coordinating center, the researchers will examine the major sources of variation in brain imaging studies, including the instruments used, calibration of equipment and data analysis, to find avenues for large-scale experiments and to maximize the insight imaging studies can provide.

UCI’s Potkin will lead 10 centers conducting clinical trials using MRI scanners, applying the technology developed in the project to study healthy persons and patients with schizophrenia. The researchers will compare the anatomic and brain changes that occur in this disease, and detail how brain functions change as the disease progresses. They also will compare what happens in the brain before and after medication.
The brain images will be standardized and shared among the research centers around the country. Each center will conduct its own unique studies and share them through the BIRN technology.

“Any of the project’s researchers should then be able to store MRI images, share clinical findings and compare behavioral data,” said UCSD’s Ellisman. “Using advances in information engineering and broadband networking on the causes and effects of treatment of schizophrenia, we believe we will accelerate progress in understanding how a wide range of diseases are caused and how they can be treated.”

The BIRN research effort will be affiliated with the California Institute for Telecommunications and Information Technology [Cal-(IT)? ] to develop large-scale medical science advances. Cal-(IT)? researchers at UC Irvine and UCSD and the data and knowledge engineering team at UCSD’s San Diego Supercomputer Center will use the brain imaging project as a model around which to develop new information technologies that will allow larger-scale biomedical studies not only in brain imaging research but in medical and scientific research in general.

Cal-(IT)? is one of four institutes in the California Institutes for Science and Innovation initiative, which is funded by the state to promote innovation as a key to economic development on the model of Silicon Valley. The collaborative Cal-(IT)? effort between UCSD and UCI is designed to extend the Internet throughout the physical world with infrastructure development and prototyping driven by applications needs in environmental science, civil infrastructure, intelligent transportation, biomedical research, and new media arts.


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1 thought on “Gov’t to establish national schizophrenia brain image database”

  1. I recently found an article on google “Remote Mental influence” I think it may be of value to your research.

    Also have you experimented with witch craft or trance states to create some of the symptoms associated with schizophrenia? This can help in keeping the patient load up and medication sales up aswell.

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