1,874 research outputs found
Cortical thickness, surface area and volume measures in Parkinson's disease, multiple system atrophy and progressive supranuclear palsy
OBJECTIVE
Parkinson's disease (PD), Multiple System Atrophy (MSA) and Progressive Supranuclear Palsy (PSP) are neurodegenerative diseases that can be difficult to distinguish clinically. The objective of the current study was to use surface-based analysis techniques to assess cortical thickness, surface area and grey matter volume to identify unique morphological patterns of cortical atrophy in PD, MSA and PSP and to relate these patterns of change to disease duration and clinical features.
METHODS
High resolution 3D T1-weighted MRI volumes were acquired from 14 PD patients, 18 MSA, 14 PSP and 19 healthy control participants. Cortical thickness, surface area and volume analyses were carried out using the automated surface-based analysis package FreeSurfer (version 5.1.0). Measures of disease severity and duration were assessed for correlation with cortical morphometric changes in each clinical group.
RESULTS
Results show that in PSP, widespread cortical thinning and volume loss occurs within the frontal lobe, particularly the superior frontal gyrus. In addition, PSP patients also displayed increased surface area in the pericalcarine. In comparison, PD and MSA did not display significant changes in cortical morphology.
CONCLUSION
These results demonstrate that patients with clinically established PSP exhibit distinct patterns of cortical atrophy, particularly affecting the frontal lobe. These results could be used in the future to develop a useful clinical application of MRI to distinguish PSP patients from PD and MSA patients
Intersubject Regularity in the Intrinsic Shape of Human V1
Previous studies have reported considerable intersubject variability in the three-dimensional geometry of the human primary visual cortex (V1). Here we demonstrate that much of this variability is due to extrinsic geometric features of the cortical folds, and that the intrinsic shape of V1 is similar across individuals. V1 was imaged in ten ex vivo human hemispheres using high-resolution (200 μm) structural magnetic resonance imaging at high field strength (7 T). Manual tracings of the stria of Gennari were used to construct a surface representation, which was computationally flattened into the plane with minimal metric distortion. The instrinsic shape of V1 was determined from the boundary of the planar representation of the stria. An ellipse provided a simple parametric shape model that was a good approximation to the boundary of flattened V1. The aspect ration of the best-fitting ellipse was found to be consistent across subject, with a mean of 1.85 and standard deviation of 0.12. Optimal rigid alignment of size-normalized V1 produced greater overlap than that achieved by previous studies using different registration methods. A shape analysis of published macaque data indicated that the intrinsic shape of macaque V1 is also stereotyped, and similar to the human V1 shape. Previoud measurements of the functional boundary of V1 in human and macaque are in close agreement with these results
Supervised Nonparametric Image Parcellation
Author Manuscript 2010 August 25. 12th International Conference, London, UK, September 20-24, 2009, Proceedings, Part IISegmentation of medical images is commonly formulated as a supervised learning problem, where manually labeled training data are summarized using a parametric atlas. Summarizing the data alleviates the computational burden at the expense of possibly losing valuable information on inter-subject variability. This paper presents a novel framework for Supervised Nonparametric Image Parcellation (SNIP). SNIP models the intensity and label images as samples of a joint distribution estimated from the training data in a non-parametric fashion. By capitalizing on recently developed fast and robust pairwise image alignment tools, SNIP employs the entire training data to segment a new image via Expectation Maximization. The use of multiple registrations increases robustness to occasional registration failures. We report experiments on 39 volumetric brain MRI scans with manual labels for the white matter, cortex and subcortical structures. SNIP yields better segmentation than state-of-the-art algorithms in multiple regions of interest.NAMIC (NIHNIBIBNAMICU54-EB005149)NAC (NIHNCRRNACP41-RR13218)mBIRN (NIHNCRRmBIRNU24-RR021382)NIH NINDS (Grant R01-NS051826)National Science Foundation (U.S.) (CAREER Grant 0642971)NCRR (P41-RR14075)NCRR (R01 RR16594-01A1)NIBIB (R01 EB001550)NIBIB (R01EB006758)NINDS (R01 NS052585-01)Mind Research InstituteEllison Medical FoundationSingapore. Agency for Science, Technology and Researc
Pulse Sequence Resilient Fast Brain Segmentation
Accurate automatic segmentation of brain anatomy from
-weighted~(-w) magnetic resonance images~(MRI) has been a
computationally intensive bottleneck in neuroimaging pipelines, with
state-of-the-art results obtained by unsupervised intensity modeling-based
methods and multi-atlas registration and label fusion. With the advent of
powerful supervised convolutional neural networks~(CNN)-based learning
algorithms, it is now possible to produce a high quality brain segmentation
within seconds. However, the very supervised nature of these methods makes it
difficult to generalize them on data different from what they have been trained
on. Modern neuroimaging studies are necessarily multi-center initiatives with a
wide variety of acquisition protocols. Despite stringent protocol harmonization
practices, it is not possible to standardize the whole gamut of MRI imaging
parameters across scanners, field strengths, receive coils etc., that affect
image contrast. In this paper we propose a CNN-based segmentation algorithm
that, in addition to being highly accurate and fast, is also resilient to
variation in the input -w acquisition. Our approach relies on building
approximate forward models of -w pulse sequences that produce a typical
test image. We use the forward models to augment the training data with test
data specific training examples. These augmented data can be used to update
and/or build a more robust segmentation model that is more attuned to the test
data imaging properties. Our method generates highly accurate, state-of-the-art
segmentation results~(overall Dice overlap=0.94), within seconds and is
consistent across a wide-range of protocols.Comment: Accepted at MICCAI 201
Deep Learning versus Classical Regression for Brain Tumor Patient Survival Prediction
Deep learning for regression tasks on medical imaging data has shown
promising results. However, compared to other approaches, their power is
strongly linked to the dataset size. In this study, we evaluate
3D-convolutional neural networks (CNNs) and classical regression methods with
hand-crafted features for survival time regression of patients with high grade
brain tumors. The tested CNNs for regression showed promising but unstable
results. The best performing deep learning approach reached an accuracy of
51.5% on held-out samples of the training set. All tested deep learning
experiments were outperformed by a Support Vector Classifier (SVC) using 30
radiomic features. The investigated features included intensity, shape,
location and deep features. The submitted method to the BraTS 2018 survival
prediction challenge is an ensemble of SVCs, which reached a cross-validated
accuracy of 72.2% on the BraTS 2018 training set, 57.1% on the validation set,
and 42.9% on the testing set. The results suggest that more training data is
necessary for a stable performance of a CNN model for direct regression from
magnetic resonance images, and that non-imaging clinical patient information is
crucial along with imaging information.Comment: Contribution to The International Multimodal Brain Tumor Segmentation
(BraTS) Challenge 2018, survival prediction tas
Evidence of distributed subpial T2* signal changes at 7T in multiple sclerosis : an histogram based approach
Subpial lesions are the most frequent type of cortical lesion in multiple sclerosis (MS), and are thought to be closely associated with poor clinical outcome. Neuropathological studies report that subpial lesions may come in two major types: they may appear as circumscribed, focal lesions, or extend across multiple adjacent gyri leading to a phenomenon termed “general subpial demyelination” [1]. The in vivo evaluation of diffuse subpial disease is challenging – signal changes may be subtle, and extend across large regions where signal inhomogeneities due to B1 and RF receive coil non-uniformities become more pronounced. Here, we investigate whether a histogram-based analysis of T2* signal intensity in the cortex, at 7T MRI, can show evidence of distributed subpial cortical changes in patients with MS, as described histopathologically. We hypothesized that this phenomenon would be associated with significantly increased T2* signal intensity in patients compared to age-matched controls.Center Algoritm
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Brain structural concomitants of resting state heart rate variability in the young and old: evidence from two independent samples
Previous research has shown associations between brain structure and resting state high-frequency heart rate variability (HF-HRV). Age affects both brain structure and HF-HRV. Therefore we sought to examine the relationship between brain structure and HF-HRV as a function of age. Data from two independent studies were used for the present analysis. Study 1 included 19 older adults (10 male, age range 62-78 years) and 19 younger adults (12 male, age range 19-37). Study 2 included 23 older adults (13 males; age range 55-75) and 27 younger adults (19 males; age range 18-34). The rootmean-
square of successive R-R-interval differences (RMSSD) from ECG recordings was used as timedomain measure of HF-HRV. MRI scans were performed on a 3.0-T Siemens Magnetom Trio scanner. Cortical reconstruction and volumetric segmentation were performed with the Freesurfer image analysis suite, including 12 regions as regions-of-interests (ROI). Zero-order and partial correlations were used to assess the correlation of RMSSD with cortical thickness in selected ROIs. Lateral
orbitofrontal cortex (OFC) cortical thickness was significantly associated with RMSSD. Further, both studies, in line with previous research, showed correlations between RMSSD and anterior cingulate cortex (ACC) cortical thickness. Meta-analysis on adjusted correlation coefficients from individual studies confirmed an association of RMSSD with the left rostral ACC and the left lateral OFC. Future longitudinal studies are necessary to trace individual trajectories in the association of HRV and brain
structure across aging
Spherical parameterization for genus zero surfaces using Laplace-Beltrami eigenfunctions
International audienceIn this work, we propose a fast and simple approach to obtain a spherical parameterization of a certain class of closed surfaces without holes. Our approach relies on empirical findings that can be mathematically investigated, to a certain extent, by using Laplace-Beltrami Operator and associated geometrical tools. The mapping proposed here is defined by considering only the three first non-trivial eigenfunctions of the Laplace-Beltrami Operator. Our approach requires a topological condition on those eigenfunctions, whose nodal domains must be 2. We show the efficiency of the approach through numerical experiments performed on cortical surface meshes
Automated hippocampal segmentation in 3D MRI using random undersampling with boosting algorithm
The automated identification of brain structure in Magnetic Resonance Imaging is very important both in neuroscience research and as a possible clinical diagnostic tool. In this study, a novel strategy for fully automated hippocampal segmentation in MRI is presented. It is based on a supervised algorithm, called RUSBoost, which combines data random undersampling with a boosting algorithm. RUSBoost is an algorithm specifically designed for imbalanced classification, suitable for large data sets because it uses random undersampling of the majority class. The RUSBoost performances were compared with those of ADABoost, Random Forest and the publicly available brain segmentation package, FreeSurfer. This study was conducted on a data set of 50 T1-weighted structural brain images. The RUSBoost-based segmentation tool achieved the best results with a Dice’s index of (Formula presented.) (Formula presented.) for the left (right) brain hemisphere. An independent data set of 50 T1-weighted structural brain scans was used for an independent validation of the fully trained strategies. Again the RUSBoost segmentations compared favorably with manual segmentations with the highest performances among the four tools. Moreover, the Pearson correlation coefficient between hippocampal volumes computed by manual and RUSBoost segmentations was 0.83 (0.82) for left (right) side, statistically significant, and higher than those computed by Adaboost, Random Forest and FreeSurfer. The proposed method may be suitable for accurate, robust and statistically significant segmentations of hippocampi
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