13:30 |
0245. |
Graph theory to analyse
developmental plasticity in connectivity of preterm children
Elda Fischi-Gomez1,2, Alessandra Griffa1,
Alessandro Daducci1, François Lazeyras3,4,
Jean-Philippe Thiran1,5, and Petra S. Hüppi2
1Ecole Polytechnique Federale de Lausanne (EPFL).
Signal Processing Laboratory (LTS5), Lausanne,
Switzerland, 2Division
of Development and Growth. Department of Pediatrics.
University of Geneva, Geneva, Switzerland, 3Center
for Biomedical Imaging (CIBM),Lausanne and Geneva,
Switzerland,4Department of Radiology,
University of Geneva and University Hospital of Geneva,
Geneva, Switzerland, 5Department
of Radiology of the University Hospital Center (CHUV)
and University of Lausanne (UNIL), Lausanne, Switzerland
We used DTI and network analysis to determine the impact
of prematurity and prenatal growth restriction in
neurostructural outcome of preterm born children at age
6 years-old. We construct individual brain network
graphs derived from structural connectivity matrices,
composed by an efficacy component (weighted by the mean
FA value of the bundle connecting two cortical regions)
and the density component (assumed to be constant within
a group). Both groups, when compared to controls, show
smaller efficiency (with an average path length's
increase) and transitivity that may contribute to
learning disabilities and behavior disorders linked to
preterm infants at school age.
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13:42 |
0246. |
Testing the sensitivity of
Tract-Based Spatial Statistics to simulated treatment
effects in preterm neonates
Gareth Ball1, Serena J Counsell1,
Tomoki Arichi1,2, Nazakat Merchant1,2,
Daniel Rueckert3, A David Edwards1,2,
and James P Boardman1,4
1Centre for the Developing Brain, Imaging
Sciences Department, MRC Clinical Sciences Centre,
Hammersmith Hospital, Imperial College London, London,
United Kingdom, 2Division
of Neonatology, Imperial College London Healthcare NHS
Trust, London, United Kingdom, 3Biomedical
Image Analysis Group, Department of Computing, Imperial
College London, London, United Kingdom, 4Simpson
Centre for Reproductive Health, Royal Infirmary of
Edinburgh, Edinburgh, United Kingdom
Preterm birth is associated with poor neurodevelopmental
outcome. Microstructural alterations in the developing
white matter are thought to represent key components of
preterm brain injury. Developing early imaging
biomarkers that are sensitive to these alterations, such
as TBSS, would be beneficial to the evaluation of early
neuroprotective strategies in preterm infants. Here, the
sensitivity of TBSS to detect changes in white matter
microstructure in neonates is tested by simulating
global treatment ‘effects’, represented by increased
fractional anisotropy, in groups of different sizes.
Simulations were found to predict well a real biological
effect, represented by increasing age at scan.
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13:54 |
0247. |
Microstructural Brain
Abnormalities in Neonates with Prenatal Stimulant Exposure
Linda Chang1, Kenichi Oishi2, Jon
Skranes3, Steve Buchthal1,
Caroline Jiang1, Dan Alicata4,
Antonette Hernandez1, Heather Johansen1,
Christine Cloak1, Tricia Wright5,
Lillian Fujimoto6, Susumu Mori2,
and Thomas Ernst1
1Dept of Medicine, University of Hawaii,
Honolulu, Hawaii, United States, 2Dept
of Radiology, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore,
Maryland, United States, 3Dept
of Laboratory Medicine, Children’s & Women’s Health,
Norwegian University of Science and Technology, Tronheim,
Oslo, Norway, 4Dept
of Psychiatry, University of Hawaii, Honolulu, Hawaii,
United States, 5Dept
of Obstetric & Gynecology, University of Hawaii,
Honolulu, Hawaii, United States,6Straub
Mililani Clinic, Mililani, Hawaii, United States
Prenatal stimulant-exposure, with nicotine and/or
methamphetamine may be associated with abnormal brain
development, although data in humans are limited. This
study aims to evaluate whether the major white matter
tracts and deep gray matter are abnormal in neonates
with stimulant exposure (n=18) compared to unexposed
healthy neonates (n=45). An automated atlas with LDDMM
was used to assess diffusion tensor imaging (DTI)
measures. Stimulant-exposed neonates showed lower FA in
fornix and slower age-related decline in diffusion
(axonal and radial) in the superior longitudinal
fasciculus than unexposed infants. These findings
suggest delayed brain myelination despite similar
subject characteristics at time of scans.
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14:06 |
0248.
|
Longitudinal Structural
Brain Changes in Children and Adolescents with Prenatal
Alcohol Exposure
Catherine Lebel1, Eric Kan2, Sarah
Mattson3, Edward Riley3, Kenneth
Jones4, Colleen Adnams5, Philip
May6, Mary O'Connor7, Katherine
Narr1, and Elizabeth Sowell1,2
1Neurology, University of California, Los
Angeles, CA, United States, 2Children's
Hospital Los Angeles, CA, United States, 3Psychology,
San Diego State University, CA, United States, 4Pediatrics,
University of California, San Diego, CA, United States, 5Psychiatry
and Mental Health, University of Cape Town, South
Africa, 6Nutrition,
University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, NC, United
States, 7Psychiatry
and Biobehavioral Sciences, University of California,
Los Angeles, CA, United States
Children and youth prenatally exposed to alcohol
demonstrate structural brain abnormalities compared to
controls, but it is not clear whether these
abnormalities change over time. In the first
longitudinal study of cortical development, we
demonstrate several brain regions with different
developmental trajectories between alcohol-exposed
subjects and controls, mainly in the parietal lobe. In
general, subjects with prenatal alcohol exposure
demonstrated less overall volume change, suggesting
decreased cortical plasticity compared to controls.
These results are important to consider in studies of
group differences, which may change over time, and also
are relevant for treatment and interventions in this
population.
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14:18 |
0249. |
Predicting neurological
outcome in neonatal encephalopathy: A machine learning and
network analysis approach
Etay Ziv1, Olga Tymofiyeva1, Sonia
L Bonifacio2, Patrick S McQuillen2,
Donna M Ferriero2, A James Barkovich1,
Duan Xu1, and Christopher P Hess1
1Department of Radiology & Biomedical
Imaging, UCSF, San Francisco, CA, United States, 2Department
of Pediatrics, UCSF, San Francisco, CA, United States
Neonatal encephalopathy represents a heterogeneous group
of conditions associated with life-long developmental
disabilities. The ability to predict outcome early on in
the perinatal period could potentially have a
significant impact on subsequent treatment. Structural
connectivity networks of the brain can be constructed
using diffusion MRI. We hypothesize that networks
derived from patients who have poor outcome may have
different structure than those who have good outcome.
Here we present an unbiased approach to enumerate a
large set of network properties and using a combination
of unsupervised and supervised learning, we demonstrate
surprisingly good discrimination between good and poor
neurological outcome.
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14:30 |
0250. |
DTI of the
Inter-hemispheric Connectivities in Neonates with
Transposition of the Great Arteries Undergoing
Cardiopulmonary Bypass Surgery.
Malek I Makki1, Rabia Liamlahi2,
Hitendu Dave3, Bea Latal4, Vera
Bernet5, Ianina Scheer6, Klaudija
Batinic2, Cornelia Hagmann7, and
Walter Knirsch2
1MRI Research, University Children Hospital
Zurich, Zurich, Switzerland, 2Cardiology,
University Children Hospital Zurich, 3Congenital
Cardiovascular Surgery, University Children Hospital
Zurich, 4Child
Development, University Children Hospital Zurich, 5Pediatrics
Intensive Care, University Children Hospital Zurich, 6Diagnostic
Imaging, University Children Hospital Zurich, 7University
Hospital Zurich
Fifteen neonates with d-transposition of the great
artery underwent DTI before and after cardiopulmonary
bypas surgery. The genu and splenium od the corpus
callosum were investigated with DTI and compared to ten
age amtched healthy neonates. Abnormal white matter
growth was reported in the genu but not in the splenium.
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14:42 |
0251. |
The Variation of White
Matter Tract in Neonates with Mild Hypoxic-Ischemic Injury:A
Diffusion Tensor Image Analysis by Tract-Based Spatial
Statistics (TBSS)
Gao Jie1, Li Xianjun2, Hou Xin1,
Sun Qinli1, Yu Bolang1, Ed X Wu3,
Wan Mingxi2, and Yang Jian1
1Department of radiology, the first
affiliated hospital of medical college, Xi’an Jiaotong
University, Xi'an, Shannxi, China,2Department
of Biomedical Engineering, School of Life Science and
Technology, Xi' an Jiaotong University, Xi'an, Shannxi,
China,3Laboratory of Biomedical Imaging and
Signal Processing, The University of Hong Kong, Hong
Kong SAR, China
TThe aim of this study is to use tract-based spatial
statistics (TBSS) to test the voxel-wise differences in
fractional anisotropy (FA), 1, 2, 3
between normal and mild hypoxic-ischemic (HI) neonatal
brains. 41 full term neonates (17 neonates with mild HI
injury, 24 neonates as normal control,) and 31 preterm
neonates (11 neonates with mild HI injury, 20 neonates
as normal control) underwent T1 weighted images (T1WIs),
T2 weighted images (T2WIs) and diffusion tensor image
(DTI) within 28 days after birth. The results of TBSS
mainly showed significantly decreased FA and increased 2, 3
in multiple white matter tracts (p<0.05). These
differences of DTI indexes between the mild HI and
normal neonates were mainly located in cerebral peduncle
(CP), posterior limb of internal capsule (PLIC) and
corona radiata (CR) both in full term and preterm
groups. Moreover, the additional regions with above
changes of DTI indexes in full term neonates were
exhibited in external capsule (EC) and splenium of the
corpus callosum (SCC) mainly. This is the first study to
explore white matter injury in both preterm and term
neonatal brains with mild HI injury by using TBSS for
DTI data analyzing. TBSS, as an objective and sensitive
method, can reveal multiple white matter microstructural
abnormalities in mild HI neonatal brains.
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14:54 |
0252. |
Diffusion tractography in
term neonates with hypoxic-ischemic encephalopathy:
Projection Fiber System and corpus callosum involvement as
predictors of neurodevelopmental outcome
Katyucia de Macedo Rodrigues1, Maria de
Carmen Fons Stupina2,3, Ainsley MacLean4,
Janet Soul2, Rudolph Pienaar5,
Omar Khwaja2, and P. Ellen Grant5
1Radiology, Children's Hospital Boston,
Boston, Massachusettes, United States, 2Neurology,
Children's Hospital Boston, Boston, Massachusettes,
United States, 3Pediatric
Neurology, Sant Joan de Seu Hospital for Children,
Barcelona, Spain, 4Neuroradiology,
Brigham and Women's Hospital, Boston, Massachusettes,
United States, 5Center
for Fetal-Neonatal Neuroimaging & Developmental Science,
Children's Hospital Boston, Boston, Massachusettes,
United States
We performed a tractography-based DTI analysis of
projection and comissural tracts in term/near term
neonates who presented perinatal HIE and had a brain MRI
performed within 7 postnatal days and neonates with
normal MRI without HIE and studied its correlation with
early motor outcome. Tractography-based analysis
demonstrated selective vulnerability of corticospinal
tract in HIE, with low mean tract ADC and FA correlating
significantly with early neurological outcome. Treatment
with hypothermia was associated with increase in mean
ADC in the splenium of the corpus callosum and
significantly higher mean tract FA suggesting less
metabolic compromise and preservation of white matter
microstructure.
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15:06 |
0253. |
Quantitative improvement
in FA values in various fiber bundles is associated with
improvement in Clinical Grade of children with Cerebral
Palsy following therapy
Saurabh Chaturvedi1, Puneet Goyal2,
Vimal K Paliwal3, Ankita Chourasia1,
Yogita Rai1, Ravindra Kumar Garg4,
Ram Kishore Singh Rathore5, and Rakesh Kumar
Gupta1
1Radiodiagnosis, Sanjay Gandhi Post Graduate
Institute of Medical Sciences, Lucknow, Uttar pradesh,
India, 2Anaesthesiology,
Sanjay Gandhi Post Graduate Institute of Medical
Sciences, Lucknow, Uttar Pradesh, India, 3Neurology,
Sanjay Gandhi Post Graduate Institute of Medical
Sciences, Lucknow, UP, India, 4Neurology,
Chhatrapati Sahu ji Maharaj Medical University, Lucknow,
Uttar Pradesh, India, 5Indian
Institute of Technology, Kanpur
We examined 10 CP children twice (10 base line&10 follow
up at 6month; 8 boys&2 girls) (mean age=6 years) who had
spastic diplegia, GMFM score ranging from 50-60 and with
grade II spasticity. There was a significant difference
between FA values of baseline and follow-up in left
motor, left sensory, CG, ATR, PTR bundles. A significant
positive correlation was found between GMFM scores and
FA values of left motor (r=0.723, p<0.001), left sensory
(r=0.609, p=0.004), CG (r=0.787, p<0.001) and ATR
(r=0.420, p=0.065).We conclude that improvement in white
matter fibers is associated with physical improvement in
these children.
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15:18 |
0254. |
Prognostic Significance of
Combined Diffusion Weighted Imaging and Magnetic Resonance
Spectroscopy in Neonates with Hypoxic Ischemic Injury
Eva-Maria Ratai1, Jason M Johnson2,
Bindu Setty2, Joseph Chou3,
Kalpathy Krishnamoorthy4, Paul Caruso2,
and P Ellen Grant5
1Radiology, A. A. Martinos Center for
Biomedical Imaging, Massachusetts General Hospital,
Charlestown, MA, United States, 2Radiology,
Massachusetts General Hospital, United States, 3Pediatric
Medical Services / Neonatal ICU, Massachusetts General
Hospital, United States, 4Pediatric
Neurology, Massachusetts General Hospital, United
States, 5Radiology,
Children’s Hospital Boston, United States
The goal of this study was to investigate the prognostic
values of ADC and MRS in neonatal hypoxic ischemic
injury within 5 days of life. Eight of 17 patients died
before discharge from the hospital and nine had
unfavorable outcome including severe developmental
delay. Low concentrations of N-acetylaspartate, choline,
creatine and low ADC values in the basal ganglia were
predictive of poor outcome. High glutamate/glutamine
levels were also associated with poor outcome. Spearman
Rank analysis between ADC and spectroscopic markers
revealed significant correlations between ADC and
choline as well as ADC and N-Acetylaspartate. No
correlation with lactate was found.
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