144 research outputs found
An improvement to Global Tractography Using Anatomical Priors
Tractography is a visualization technique which reconstructs and models neural fibers in the white matter of the brain based on data from diffusion magnetic resonance imaging. It is already used locally to model parts of dominant fiber pathways but global methods are also emerging which aim to reconstruct all the brain fibers simultaneously. In this thesis we have attempted to improve the current state of the art of Global Tractography by introducing three principles: * Anatomical Priors * Introduction of fiber weights * Reduced complexity Our approach uses an optimization method based on Markov Chain Monte Carlo (MCMC) and Simulated annealing in order to fit a set of plausible initial fiber trajectories to a dataset acquired by diffusion MRI. Our method was compared to the state of the art global tractography method known as the Gibbs Tracker in a phantom study using conventional global tractography evaluation methods. In a second test, we also try the method on an in-vivo dataset of a human brain and derive the connectivity matrix with corresponding network parameters. Our approach showed considerable improvements in decreasing the amount of wrong fibers and reduced computational time. However the method still struggles to eliminate certain false but plausible connections. To remedy this, several improvements to the MCMC sampler are suggested for future work
Connectivity of the Superficial Muscles of the Human Perineum: A Diffusion Tensor Imaging-Based Global Tractography Study.
Despite the importance of pelvic floor muscles, significant controversy still exists about the true structural details of these muscles. We provide an objective analysis of the architecture and orientation of the superficial muscles of the perineum using a novel approach. Magnetic Resonance Diffusion Tensor Images (MR-DTI) were acquired in 10 healthy asymptomatic nulliparous women, and 4 healthy males. Global tractography was then used to generate the architecture of the muscles. Micro-CT imaging of a male cadaver was performed for validation of the fiber tracking results. Results show that muscles fibers of the external anal sphincter, from the right and left side, cross midline in the region of the perineal body to continue as transverse perinea and bulbospongiosus muscles of the opposite side. The morphology of the external anal sphincter resembles that of the number '8' or a "purse string". The crossing of muscle fascicles in the perineal body was supported by micro-CT imaging in the male subject. The superficial muscles of the perineum, and external anal sphincter are frequently damaged during child birth related injuries to the pelvic floor; we propose the use of MR-DTI based global tractography as a non-invasive imaging technique to assess damage to these muscles
Diffusion Tensor Imaging Based Tractography of Human Brain Fiber Bundles
Tractography is a non-invasive process for reconstruction, modeling and visualization of neural fibers in the white matter (WM) of human brain. It has emerged as a major breakthrough for neuroscience research due to its usefulness in clinical applications. Two types of tractography approaches: deterministic and probabilistic have been investigated to evaluate their performances on tracking fiber bundles using diffusion tensor imaging (DTI). The images are taken by applying pulsed magnetic fields in multiple gradient directions. After removing the non-brain areas from the images, the diffusion tensor indices for each image voxel are calculated. White matter connectivity of the brain, i.e. tractography, is primarily based upon streamline algorithms where the local tract direction is defined by the principle direction of the diffusion tensor. Simulations are performed using three approaches: fiber assignment by continuous tracking (FACT), probability index of connectivity (PICo) and Gibbs tracking (GT). Simulation results show that probabilistic tractography i.e. PICo and GT can reconstruct longer length of fibers compared to the deterministic approach-FACT but with a cost of high computation time. Moreover, GT handles the more complex fiber configurations of crossing and kissing fibers, more effectively and provides the best reconstruction of fibers. In addition, diffusion tensor indices: fractional anisotropy (FA) and mean diffusivity (MD) for a region of interest can be quantified and used to assess several brain diseases. Prospective investigation of DTI based tractography can reveal useful information on WM architecture in normal and diseased brain which will speed up the detection and treatment of various brain diseases
Bundle-o-graphy: improving structural connectivity estimation with adaptive microstructure-informed tractography
Tractography is a powerful tool for the investigation of the complex organization of the brain in vivo, as it allows inferring the macroscopic pathways of the major fiber bundles of the white matter based on non-invasive diffusion-weighted magnetic resonance imaging acquisitions. Despite this unique and compelling ability, some studies have exposed the poor anatomical accuracy of the reconstructions obtained with this technique and challenged its effectiveness for studying brain connectivity. In this work, we describe a novel method to readdress tractography reconstruction problem in a global manner by combining the strengths of so-called generative and discriminative strategies. Starting from an input tractogram, we parameterize the connections between brain regions following a bundle-based representation that allows to drastically reducing the number of parameters needed to model groups of fascicles. The parameters space is explored following an MCMC generative approach, while a discrimininative method is exploited to globally evaluate the set of connections which is updated according to Bayes' rule. Our results on both synthetic and real brain data show that the proposed solution, called bundle-o-graphy, allows improving the anatomical accuracy of the reconstructions while keeping the computational complexity similar to other state-of-the-art methods
Genetic and Neuroanatomical Support for Functional Brain Network Dynamics in Epilepsy
Focal epilepsy is a devastating neurological disorder that affects an
overwhelming number of patients worldwide, many of whom prove resistant to
medication. The efficacy of current innovative technologies for the treatment
of these patients has been stalled by the lack of accurate and effective
methods to fuse multimodal neuroimaging data to map anatomical targets driving
seizure dynamics. Here we propose a parsimonious model that explains how
large-scale anatomical networks and shared genetic constraints shape
inter-regional communication in focal epilepsy. In extensive ECoG recordings
acquired from a group of patients with medically refractory focal-onset
epilepsy, we find that ictal and preictal functional brain network dynamics can
be accurately predicted from features of brain anatomy and geometry, patterns
of white matter connectivity, and constraints complicit in patterns of gene
coexpression, all of which are conserved across healthy adult populations.
Moreover, we uncover evidence that markers of non-conserved architecture,
potentially driven by idiosyncratic pathology of single subjects, are most
prevalent in high frequency ictal dynamics and low frequency preictal dynamics.
Finally, we find that ictal dynamics are better predicted by white matter
features and more poorly predicted by geometry and genetic constraints than
preictal dynamics, suggesting that the functional brain network dynamics
manifest in seizures rely on - and may directly propagate along - underlying
white matter structure that is largely conserved across humans. Broadly, our
work offers insights into the generic architectural principles of the human
brain that impact seizure dynamics, and could be extended to further our
understanding, models, and predictions of subject-level pathology and response
to intervention
Embarrassingly Parallel Acceleration of Global Tractography via Dynamic Domain Partitioning
Global tractography estimates brain connectivity by organizing signal-generating fiber segments in an optimal configuration that best describes the measured diffusion-weighted data, promising better stability than local greedy methods with respect to imaging noise. However, global tractography is computationally very demanding and requires computation times that are often prohibitive for clinical applications. We present here a reformulation of the global tractography algorithm for fast parallel implementation amendable to acceleration using multi-core CPUs and general-purpose GPUs. Our method is motivated by the key observation that each fiber segment is affected by a limited spatial neighborhood. In other words, a fiber segment is influenced only by the fiber segments that are (or can potentially be) connected to its two ends and also by the diffusion-weighted signal in its proximity. This observation makes it possible to parallelize the Markov chain Monte Carlo (MCMC) algorithm used in the global tractography algorithm so that concurrent updating of independent fiber segments can be carried out. Experiments show that the proposed algorithm can significantly speed up global tractography, while at the same time maintain or even improve tractography performance
Global tractography with embedded anatomical priors for quantitative connectivity analysis.
Tractography algorithms provide us with the ability to non-invasively reconstruct fiber pathways in the white matter (WM) by exploiting the directional information described with diffusion magnetic resonance. These methods could be divided into two major classes, local and global. Local methods reconstruct each fiber tract iteratively by considering only directional information at the voxel level and its neighborhood. Global methods, on the other hand, reconstruct all the fiber tracts of the whole brain simultaneously by solving a global energy minimization problem. The latter have shown improvements compared to previous techniques but these algorithms still suffer from an important shortcoming that is crucial in the context of brain connectivity analyses. As no anatomical priors are usually considered during the reconstruction process, the recovered fiber tracts are not guaranteed to connect cortical regions and, as a matter of fact, most of them stop prematurely in the WM; this violates important properties of neural connections, which are known to originate in the gray matter (GM) and develop in the WM. Hence, this shortcoming poses serious limitations for the use of these techniques for the assessment of the structural connectivity between brain regions and, de facto, it can potentially bias any subsequent analysis. Moreover, the estimated tracts are not quantitative, every fiber contributes with the same weight toward the predicted diffusion signal. In this work, we propose a novel approach for global tractography that is specifically designed for connectivity analysis applications which: (i) explicitly enforces anatomical priors of the tracts in the optimization and (ii) considers the effective contribution of each of them, i.e., volume, to the acquired diffusion magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) image. We evaluated our approach on both a realistic diffusion MRI phantom and in vivo data, and also compared its performance to existing tractography algorithms
From Caenorhabditis elegans to the Human Connectome: A Specific Modular Organisation Increases Metabolic, Functional, and Developmental Efficiency
The connectome, or the entire connectivity of a neural system represented by
network, ranges various scales from synaptic connections between individual
neurons to fibre tract connections between brain regions. Although the
modularity they commonly show has been extensively studied, it is unclear
whether connection specificity of such networks can already be fully explained
by the modularity alone. To answer this question, we study two networks, the
neuronal network of C. elegans and the fibre tract network of human brains
yielded through diffusion spectrum imaging (DSI). We compare them to their
respective benchmark networks with varying modularities, which are generated by
link swapping to have desired modularity values but otherwise maximally random.
We find several network properties that are specific to the neural networks and
cannot be fully explained by the modularity alone. First, the clustering
coefficient and the characteristic path length of C. elegans and human
connectomes are both higher than those of the benchmark networks with similar
modularity. High clustering coefficient indicates efficient local information
distribution and high characteristic path length suggests reduced global
integration. Second, the total wiring length is smaller than for the
alternative configurations with similar modularity. This is due to lower
dispersion of connections, which means each neuron in C. elegans connectome or
each region of interest (ROI) in human connectome reaches fewer ganglia or
cortical areas, respectively. Third, both neural networks show lower
algorithmic entropy compared to the alternative arrangements. This implies that
fewer rules are needed to encode for the organisation of neural systems
Adaptive microstructure-informed tractography for accurate brain connectivity analyses
Human brain has been subject of deep interest for centuries, given it's central role in controlling and directing the actions and functions of the body as response to external stimuli. The neural tissue is primarily constituted of neurons and, together with dendrites and the nerve synapses, constitute the gray matter (GM) which plays a major role in cognitive functions. The information processed in the GM travel from one region to the other of the brain along nerve cell projections, called axons. All together they constitute the white matter (WM) whose wiring organization still remains challenging to uncover. The relationship between structure organization of the brain and function has been deeply investigated on humans and animals based on the assumption that the anatomic architecture determine the network dynamics. In response to that, many different imaging techniques raised, among which diffusion-weighted magnetic resonance imaging (DW-MRI) has triggered tremendous hopes and expectations. Diffusion-weighted imaging measures both restricted and unrestricted diffusion, i.e. the degree of movement freedom of the water molecules, allowing to map the tissue fiber architecture in vivo and non-invasively. Based on DW-MRI data, tractography is able to exploit information of the local fiber orientation to recover global fiber pathways, called streamlines, that represent groups of axons. This, in turn, allows to infer the WM structural connectivity, becoming widely used in many different clinical applications as for diagnoses, virtual dissections and surgical planning. However, despite this unique and compelling ability, data acquisition still suffers from technical limitations and recent studies have highlighted the poor anatomical accuracy of the reconstructions obtained with this technique and challenged its effectiveness for studying brain connectivity. The focus of this Ph.D. project is to specifically address these limitations and to improve the anatomical accuracy of the structural connectivity estimates. To this aim, we developed a global optimization algorithm that exploits micro and macro-structure information, introducing an iterative procedure that uses the underlying tissue properties to drive the reconstruction using a semi-global approach. Then, we investigated the possibility to dynamically adapt the position of a set of candidate streamlines while embedding the anatomical prior of trajectories smoothness and adapting the configuration based on the observed data. Finally, we introduced the concept of bundle-o-graphy by implementing a method to model groups of streamlines based on the concept that axons are organized into fascicles, adapting their shape and extent based on the underlying microstructure
Nonlinear tube-fitting for the analysis of anatomical and functional structures
We are concerned with the estimation of the exterior surface and interior
summaries of tube-shaped anatomical structures. This interest is motivated by
two distinct scientific goals, one dealing with the distribution of HIV
microbicide in the colon and the other with measuring degradation in
white-matter tracts in the brain. Our problem is posed as the estimation of the
support of a distribution in three dimensions from a sample from that
distribution, possibly measured with error. We propose a novel tube-fitting
algorithm to construct such estimators. Further, we conduct a simulation study
to aid in the choice of a key parameter of the algorithm, and we test our
algorithm with validation study tailored to the motivating data sets. Finally,
we apply the tube-fitting algorithm to a colon image produced by single photon
emission computed tomography (SPECT) and to a white-matter tract image produced
using diffusion tensor imaging (DTI).Comment: Published in at http://dx.doi.org/10.1214/10-AOAS384 the Annals of
Applied Statistics (http://www.imstat.org/aoas/) by the Institute of
Mathematical Statistics (http://www.imstat.org
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