7 research outputs found

    Accelerated Microstructure Imaging via Convex Optimisation for regions with multiple fibres (AMICOx)

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    This paper reviews and extends our previous work to enable fast axonal diameter mapping from diffusion MRI data in the presence of multiple fibre populations within a voxel. Most of the existing microstructure imaging techniques use non-linear algorithms to fit their data models and consequently, they are computationally expensive and usually slow. Moreover, most of them assume a single axon orientation while numerous regions of the brain actually present more complex configurations, e.g. fiber crossing. We present a flexible framework, based on convex optimisation, that enables fast and accurate reconstructions of the microstructure organisation, not limited to areas where the white matter is coherently oriented. We show through numerical simulations the ability of our method to correctly estimate the microstructure features (mean axon diameter and intra-cellular volume fraction) in crossing regions

    Microstructure ­driven tractography in the human brain

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    International audienceIntroduction: Diffusion-weighted (DW) magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) tractography has become the tool of choice to probe the human brain'swhite matter (WM) in vivo. However, the relationship between the resulting streamlines and underlying WM microstructurecharacteristics, such as axon diameter, remains poorly understood. In this work, we reconstruct human brain fascicles using a newapproach to trace WM fascicles while simultaneously characterizing the apparent distribution of axon diameters within the fascicle. Thisprovides the mean to estimate the microstructure characteristics of fascicles while improving their reconstruction in complex tissueconfigurations

    Estimation of Fiber Orientations Using Neighborhood Information

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    Data from diffusion magnetic resonance imaging (dMRI) can be used to reconstruct fiber tracts, for example, in muscle and white matter. Estimation of fiber orientations (FOs) is a crucial step in the reconstruction process and these estimates can be corrupted by noise. In this paper, a new method called Fiber Orientation Reconstruction using Neighborhood Information (FORNI) is described and shown to reduce the effects of noise and improve FO estimation performance by incorporating spatial consistency. FORNI uses a fixed tensor basis to model the diffusion weighted signals, which has the advantage of providing an explicit relationship between the basis vectors and the FOs. FO spatial coherence is encouraged using weighted l1-norm regularization terms, which contain the interaction of directional information between neighbor voxels. Data fidelity is encouraged using a squared error between the observed and reconstructed diffusion weighted signals. After appropriate weighting of these competing objectives, the resulting objective function is minimized using a block coordinate descent algorithm, and a straightforward parallelization strategy is used to speed up processing. Experiments were performed on a digital crossing phantom, ex vivo tongue dMRI data, and in vivo brain dMRI data for both qualitative and quantitative evaluation. The results demonstrate that FORNI improves the quality of FO estimation over other state of the art algorithms.Comment: Journal paper accepted in Medical Image Analysis. 35 pages and 16 figure

    Multi-tensor model based tractography of axonal bundles

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    Cílem semestrální práce je návrh trasovacího algoritmu, který zohledňuje mikrostrukturní vlastnosti nervové tkáně. K této problematice je sepsána rešerše obsahující úvod do problematiky. Je zde popsán jev difuze, princip difuzně váženého MRI a odhad profilu anizotropní difuze. K podrobnější analýze byl vybrán algoritmus COMMIT, u kterého byla navržena alternativní optimalizační metoda.The aim of this work is to design the tractography algorithm which consider microstructure features of the neuronal tissue. The methodological background is described, where diffusion, diffusion weighted MRI and single voxel diffusion profile modeling are depicted. COMMIT model was chosen to be analyzed and alternative method of optimization was proposed.

    Advanced MRI methods for probing disease severity and functional decline in multiple sclerosis

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    Multiple sclerosis (MS) is a chronic and severe disease of the central nervous system characterized by complex pathology including inflammatory demyelination and neurodegeneration. MS impacts >2.8 million people worldwide, with most starting with a relapsing-remitting form (RRMS) in young adulthood, and many of them worsening to a secondary-progressive course (SPMS) despite treatment. So, there is a clear need for improved disease characterization. MRI is an ideal tool for non-invasive assessment of MS pathology, but there is still no established measure of disease activity and functional consequences. This project aims to overcome the challenge by developing novel imaging measures based on brain diffusion MRI and phase congruency texture analysis of conventional MRI. Through advanced modeling and analysis of clinically feasible brain MRI, this thesis investigates whether and how the derived measures differentiate MS pathology types and disease severity and predict functional outcomes in MS. The overall process has led to important technical innovations in several aspects. These include: innovative modeling of simple diffusion acquisitions to generate high angular resolution diffusion imaging (HARDI) measures; new optimization and harmonization techniques for diffusion MRI; innovative neural network models to create new diffusion data for comprehensive HARDI modeling; and novel methods and a graphic user interface for optimizing phase congruency analyses. Assisted by different machine learning methods, collective findings show that advanced measures from both diffusion MRI and phase congruency are highly sensitive to subtle differences in MS pathology, which differentiate disease severity between RRMS and SPMS through multi-dimensional analyses including chronic active lesions, and predict functional outcomes especially in physical and neurocognitive domains. These results are clinically translational and the new measures and techniques can help improve the evaluation and management of both MS and similar diseases

    Accelerated Microstructure Imaging via Convex Optimisation for regions with multiple fibres (AMICOx)

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    This paper reviews and extends our previous work to enable fast axonal diameter mapping from diffusion MRI data in the presence of multiple fibre populations within a voxel. Most of the existing mi-crostructure imaging techniques use non-linear algorithms to fit their data models and consequently, they are computationally expensive and usually slow. Moreover, most of them assume a single axon orientation while numerous regions of the brain actually present more complex configurations, e.g. fiber crossing. We present a flexible framework, based on convex optimisation, that enables fast and accurate reconstructions of the microstructure organisation, not limited to areas where the white matter is coherently oriented. We show through numerical simulations the ability of our method to correctly estimate the microstructure features (mean axon diameter and intra-cellular volume fraction) in crossing regions
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