Electronic
Poster Session - Neuro B |
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Wednesday 9 May 2012
Exhibition Hall |
10:00 - 11:00 |
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Computer # |
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3632. |
25 |
MRI biomarkers capable of
detecting effects of an experimental pharmacologic therapy
for idiopathic Normal Pressure Hydrocephalus
Milos Ivkovic1, Heather Katzen2,
Ilhami Kovanlikaya1, Ahmet Bagci2,
Linda Heier1, Noam Alperin2,
Ashish Raj1, and Norman Relkin1
1Weill Cornell Medical College, New York
City, NY, United States, 2University
of Miami School of Medicine, Miami, FL
There are no proven pharmacologic treatments for Normal
Pressure Hydrocephalus (NPH). Acetazolamide (ACZ) is
known to reduce CSF production and interstitial edema.
We hypothesized that a low dose of ACZ would reduce CSF
production and brain interstitial fluid in NPH. By using
a combination of DW-MRI, T1 and T2-FLAIR images, we
unequivocally determined that ACZ reduced WM
abnormalities and interstitial brain water in NPH
patients. T2-FLAIR and T1 volumetrics showed consistent
reduction in WM pathology. By the use of DW-MRI, we were
able to detect changes within the remaining areas of WM
signal abnormalities which would otherwise have gone
unnoticed.
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3633. |
26 |
Cerebellar white matter
abnormalities following primary blast injury
Christine MacDonald1, Ann Johnson1,
James Sorrell1, Thomas Malone1,
Dana Cooper1, Elliot Nelson2,
Nicole Werner1, Joshua Shimony3,
Matthew Parsons3, Abraham Snyder3,
Marcus Raichle3, Raymond Fang4,
Stephen Flaherty5, Michael Russell6,
and David Brody1
1Neurology, Washington University, Saint
Louis, MO, United States, 2Psychiatry,
Washington Univeristy, Saint Louis, MO, United States, 3Radiology,
Washington University, Saint Louis, MO, United States, 4Landstuhl
Regional Medical Center, Landstuhl, Germany, 5Cape
Fear Valley Medical Center, Fayetteville, NC, United
States, 6HQ,
US MEDCOM, United States
The effects of blast exposure on human brain in the
absence of head impact are unknown. Previous clinical
studies, experimental animal models, and computational
modeling of blast describe changes to cerebellum and
brainstem. In a unique group of US military personnel
with isolated, primary blast-related traumatic brain
injury and no other insult, we found DTI abnormalities
consistent with white matter injury in 75% of subjects
specifically in the cerebellum. These findings support
the hypothesis that there may be a specific contribution
of blast to brain injury in the absence of head impact
and that cerebellum may be particularly vulnerable.
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3634. |
27 |
White Matter Damage in
Gulf War Illness Patients: A Quantitative MRI Relaxometry
Study
Kaundinya Gopinath1,2, Saurabh Vaidya2,
Sandeepkumar Ganji2, Sergey Cheshkov2,
Robert Haley3, and Richard Briggs2,3
1Department of Radiology & Imaging Sciences,
Emory University, Atlanta, GA, United States, 2Department
of Radiology, UT Southwestern Medical Center, Dallas,
TX, United States, 3Department
of Internal Medicine, UT Southwestern Medical Center,
Dallas, TX, United States
Gulf War Illness (GWI) is a multi-symptom disorder
characterized by cognition, emotion and sensory
deficits. This study used a multi-slice multi-echo
T2-mapping sequence to examine WM integrity in GWI
veterans with Syndromes1 (Syn1), Syn2 and Syn3, and
age-matched controls. The control group’s WM T2s were
similar to those observed in T2 relaxometry studies of
intact WM. Syn2 and Syn3 groups exhibited WM impairment
in the form of increased T2 relaxation times compared to
controls, in important WM areas such as the cholinergic
pathway which serve a number of cognitive functions.
Thus WM impairment could be an important marker for GWI.
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3635. |
28 |
Verification of Chronic
Hippocampus Perfusion Abnormalities in Ill Gulf War Veterans
from a Representative National Sample
Xiufeng Li1,2, Jeffrey S. Spence3,4,
David M. Buhner4, Robert W. Haley4,
and Richard W. Briggs2,4
1Center for Magnetic Resonance Research,
University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, MN, United States, 2Radiology,
UT Southwestern Medical Center, Dallas, TX, United
States, 3Clinical
Sciences, UT Southwestern Medical Center, Dallas, TX,
United States, 4Internal
Medicine, UT Southwestern Medical Center, Dallas, TX,
United States
New ASL hippocampus perfusion study results of Gulf War
veterans recruited from a representative national sample
of over 8,000 veterans corroborate previous SPECT and
ASL results of Gulf War veterans selected from the 24th
U.S. Naval Reserve Mobile Construction Battalion that
show chronic and perhaps progressive hippocampal
perfusion dysfunction both at baseline and in response
to challenge with the short-acting, reversible
cholinesterase inhibitor physostigmine. The ASL
physostigmine challenge test is a valuable biomarker for
the diagnosis of Gulf War illness and is practical
enough to be implemented diagnostically in a clinical
setting.
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3636. |
29 |
Diffusion Tensor
Tractography Studies correlate with Neuropsychometric tests
in patients of vitamin B12 deficiency with normal appearing
brain on conventional MRI
Pradeep K. Gupta1, R. K. Garg2, R.
Verma2, V. K. Paliwal3, M. K.
Singh2, Y. Rai1, R. S. Rathore4,
and R. K. Gupta1
1Department of Radiodiagnosis, Sanjay Gandhi
Post Graduate Institute of Medical Sciences, Lucknow,
UP, India, 2Department
of Neurology, Chattrapati Sahuji Maharaj Medical
University, Lucknow, UP, India, 3Department
of Neurology, Sanjay Gandhi Post Graduate Institute of
Medical Sciences, Lucknow, UP, India, 4Department
of Mathematics & Statistics, Indian Institute of
Technology, Kanpur, UP, India
Vitamin B-12 deficiency may leads to microstructural
changes in brain white matter. The purpose of this study
was to determine the change in DTI metrics in brain
white matter and to find out its association with
cognitive function among patients with vitamin B-12
deficiency. In this study, we included 8 patients with
vitamin B-12 deficiency and 9 healthy controls. ATR and
PTR fibers showed significant reduction in FA values
with abnormal cognitive function in these patients.
These changes in ATR and PTR in patients with vitamin
B12 deficiency with normal appearing conventional MRI
suggest these findings may be used as image biomarkers
of B12 deficiency in future.
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3637. |
30 |
Structural brain signature
of FTLD driven by granulin mutation
Valentina Battistoni1, Barbara Borroni2,
Giovanni Giulietti1, Antonella Alberici2,
Enrico Premi2, Carlo Cerini2,
Silvana Archetti3, Roberto Gasparotti4,
Carlo Caltagirone5,6, Alessandro Padovani2,
and Marco Bozzali1
1Neuroimaging Laboratory, Santa Lucia
Foundation IRCCS, Rome, Italy, 2Centre
for Ageing Brain and Neurodegenerative Disorder,
Neurology Unit, University of Brescia, Brescia, Italy, 3III
Laboratory of Biotechnology, Brescia Hospital, Brescia,
Italy, 4Neuroradiology
Unit, University of Brescia, Brescia, Italy, 5Department
of Clinical and Behavioural Neurology, Santa Lucia
Foundation IRCCS, Rome, Italy, 6Department
of Neuroscience, University of Rome 'Tor Vergata', Rome,
Italy
Using diffusion MRI, we investigated the contribution of
white matter damage in accounting for the clinical
features driven by the GRN Thr272fs mutation in fronto-temporal
lobar degeneration (FTLD). VBM showed atrophy of left
medial frontal grey matter in mutation carriers (VBM
analysis) compared to non-mutation carrier patients.
Voxel-wise group comparisons showed anterior regions of
FA reduction and increased MD in mutation carrier
patients in the anterior corpus callosum. Post-hoc
analysis showed a correlation between grey and white
matter abnormalities in mutation carrier patients.
Although this correlation does not imply causality
between the two events, this cannot be ruled out.
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3638. |
31 |
TBSS analysis in MSA
Aaron M Rulseh1, Jiri Keller2,
Robert Rusina3, Hana Brozova4,
Robert Jech4, and Josef Vymazal2
1Dept. of Radiology, Na Homolce Hospital,
Prague, Czech Republic, 2Na
Homolce Hospital, Czech Republic, 3Faculty
Thomayer Hospital, Czech Republic,4Dept. of
Neurology, Charles University in Prague, 1st Faculty of
Medicine, Czech Republic
Multiple System Atrophy (MSA) is a sporadic, progressive
disease characterized by autonomic dysfunction with
varying degrees of parkinsonian and/or cerebellar
features, and has been postulated that MSA is a primary
oligodendrogliopathy. Twenty patients with probable MSA
and twenty healthy volunteers were included. White
matter changes in MSA are widespread and not limited to
discrete regions. Dramatic changes in RD with nearly
unaltered AD support previous studies reporting
oligodendrocytes are primarily affected in MSA. Further
studies examining white matter changes in diverse
regions may extend the utility of DTI in the diagnosis
of MSA.
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3639. |
32 |
CSF and brain atrophy
investigation in neurodegenerative diseases
Bader Chaarani 1, Jadwiga Zmudka 1,
Joel Daouk 1, Catherine Gondry-Jouet 2,
Roger Bouzerar 1, and Olivier Baledent 1
1University Hospital, Amiens, France, 2Radiology,
University Hospital, Amiens, France
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3640. |
33 |
Comparing MR Estimate of
Intracranial Pressure with Valve Opening Pressure in Shunted
Patients
Noam Alperin1, Marc Muehlmann2,
Inga Koerte2, Markus Lehner2,
Aurelia Peraud2, and Birgit Ertl-Wagner2
1University of Miami, Miami, FL, United
States, 2University
of Munich, Munich, Germany
Reliable noninvasive MR measurement of intracranial
pressure (MRICP) may have an important diagnostic role
in neurosurgical problems related to altered CSF
dynamics. The reliability of the MRICP methodology was
assessed by comparing derived MRICP values with shunt
opening pressure setup in shunted patients with various
CSF related disorders. Under the assumption that ICP
values in these patients is well approximated by the
shunt opening pressure, a reliable noninvasive estimate
of ICP should demonstrate a good correspondence between
these two values.
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3641. |
34 |
Diffusion Tensor Imaging
of the Human Optic Nerve in vivo Using SENSE Accelerated
Multi-shot 2D Navigated EPI
Ha-Kyu Jeong1,2, Blake E. Dewey1,3,
Jane A. T. Hirtle1,4, Adam W. Anderson1,5,
John C. Gore1,2, and Seth A. Smith1,2
1Vanderbilt University Institute of Imaging
Science, Nashville, TN, United States, 2Radiology
and Radiological Sciences, Vanderbilt University,
Nashville, TN, United States, 3Physics
and Astronomy, Vanderbilt University, Nashville, TN,
United States, 4Psychology
and Human Development, Vanderbilt University, Nashville,
TN, United States, 5Biomedical
Engineering, Vanderbilt University, Nashville, TN,
United States
Imaging optic nerve has been considered as technically
challenging due to small size, presence of air-filled
sinuses and confounding signals from surrounding
structures. Typically, single-shot EPI has been used for
DW optic nerve imaging combined with ZOOM, reduced FOV
or outer-volume-suppression techniques. However, these
studies still suffer low SNR and residual EPI-related
artifacts. This study presents the first DW multi-shot
optic nerve imaging with SENSE and 2D navigator for
reduced EPI artifacts and correction of motion-induced
linear and non-linear shot-to-shot phase variations.
Using developed pulse sequence and reconstruction
methods, clear DW optic nerve images are presented free
of ghosting and reasonable diffusion indices.
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3642. |
35 |
Diffusion-weighted MR
Neurography of Extremity Nerves and the Initial Clinical
Applications
lian xin zhao1, guang bin wang1,
Queenie Chan2, and wei bo chen2
1Shandong Medical Imaging Research Institute,
Shandong University, jinan, shandong, China, 2Philips
Healthcare
The purpose of this study was to demonstrate the
feasibility of diffusion-weighted (DW) magnetic
resonance (MR) neurography of extremity nerves and
evaluate the potential clinical applications. DW MR
neurography images were displayed using a
three-dimensional (3D) maximum intensity projection and
evaluated in forty-seven healthy volunteers and eight
patients. The results indicate that DW MR neurography is
feasible for providing 3D visualization of major
extremity nerves. This study suggests that the use of DW
MR neurography, as complementary to conventional MR
imaging, will improve depiction and evaluation of nerve
anatomy and pathology, and their anatomic relationship
with a comprehensive overview.
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3643. |
36 |
Assembling the large-scale
human connectome: How do we partition the brain?
Etay Ziv1, Olga Tymofiyeva1,
Christopher P Hess1, Donna M Ferriero2,
A James Barkovich1, and Duan Xu1
1Department of Radiology & Biomedical
Imaging, UCSF, San Francisco, CA, United States, 2Department
of Pediatrics, UCSF, San Francisco, CA, United States
Structural connectivity networks derived from diffusion
MRI vary with choice of brain parcellation. In adults,
parcellation and subsequent assembly of the large-scale
human connectome relies heavily on brain atlases.
However, in the context of the rapidly developing
pediatric brain, such approaches introduce problematic
biases. Here we present a network-driven brain
parcellation that does not rely on brain atlases and
propose a method to define the optimal number and size
of nodes.
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3644. |
37 |
Pharmacological Magnetic
Resonance Imaging (phMRI) in healthy subjects using an i.v.
challenge with d-amphetamine
Marieke Schouw 1, Anne Marije Kaag 1,
Matthan W.A. Caan 1, Jan Booij 2, A.
J. Nederveen 1, and Liesbeth Reneman 1
1Department of Radiology, Academic Medical
Center, Amsterdam, Noord-Holland, Netherlands, 2Department
of Nuclear medicine, Academic Medical Center, Amsterdam,
Noord-Holland, Netherlands
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3645. |
38 |
T2* of Myelin Water Edited
by Longitudinal Relaxographic Imaging
Christian Labadie1,2, Abdul-Rahman Allouche2,
Monique Aubert-Frécon2, and Harald E Möller1
1Max Planck Institute for Human Cognitive and
Brain Sciences, Leipzig, Germany, 2Laboratoire
de Spectrométrie Ionique et Moléculaire, Université
Claude Bernard, Lyon, France
The interpretation of the early longitudinal relaxation
of water in the human brain at high field (B0 ≥ 3 T) is
related to an assumption on the exchange rate of water
between the confined environment of tight myelin and
other spaces: fast exchange is compatible with a
magnetization transfer model between semi-solid protons
of the myelin membranes and water, whereas slow exchange
suggests the distinct observation of mobile water in
myelin with a short T1.
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3646. |
39 |
Postmortal DWI of the
brain and comparison with in vivo data
Jin Yamamura1, Tony Schmidt1,
Roland Fischer2, Jerry Wang3, and
Gerhard Adam1
1Diagnostic and Interventional Radiology,
University Medical Center Hamburg-Eppendorf, Hamburg,
Hamburg, Germany, 2Children's
Hospital and Research Center Oakland, Oakland,
California, United States, 3Department
of Radiology, Children's Medical Center, University of
Texas Southwestern Medical Center, Dallas, Texas, United
States
DWI of the Brain in Forensic Medicine
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3647. |
40 |
Influence of Volume
Conductor Model Errors on EEG Dipole Source Localization in
Neonates
Ivana Despotovic1, Perumpillichira J. Cherian2,
Maarten De Vos3, Hans Hallez1,
Paul Govaert4, Maarten Lequin5,
Gerhard H. Visser2, Renate Renate M. Swarte4,
Ewout Vansteenkiste1, Sabine Van Huffel3,
and Wilfried Philips1
1Ghent University, MEDISIP-IPI-IBBT, Ghent,
Belgium, 2Erasmus
MC-Sophia, University Medical Center Rotterdam,
Department of Clinical Neurophysiology, Rotterdam,
Netherlands, 3Katholieke
Universiteit Leuven, ESAT-IBBT-K.U. Leuven Future Health
Department, Leuven, Belgium, 4Erasmus
MC-Sophia, Department of Neonatology, Rotterdam,
Netherlands, 5Erasmus
MC-Sophia, Department of Pediatric Radiology, Rotterdam,
Netherlands
Integrating MRI and EEG data for 3D localization of
active sources in the brain is an important diagnostic
tool in patients with neurological disorders. However,
this method has not yet been sufficiently studied in
neonates. To investigate its feasibility, we developed
an integrated method for dipole source localization in
neonates based on a realistic head model. Here, we
present our method and explore its sensitivity to
electrode mislocalization and the variations in neonatal
skull conductivity and geometry. Experimental results
indicate that EEG source imaging is feasible in neonates
and with further developments this technique can be a
useful diagnostic tool.
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3648. |
41 |
Brain Diffusion and
Perfusion Alternations in Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary
Disease (COPD)
Geon-Ho Jahng1, Chang-Woo Ryu1,
Min-Ji Kim1, Hyug-Gi Kim1, Sun Mi
Kim1, Dal Mo Yang1, Dong Wook Sung2,
and Woo-Suk Choi2
1Radiology, Kyung Hee University Hospital at
Gangdong, Kyung Hee University, Seoul, Seoul, Korea, 2Radiology,
Kyung Hee University Hospital, Kyung Hee University,
Seoul, Seoul, Korea
A cognitive deficit is a common problem in patients with
chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD). To
prospectively evaluate if MRI can demonstrate the
microstructural volume loss, the diffusion and/or
cerebral blood flow (CBF) changes in subjects with COPD
compared with cognitively normal (CN) elderly subjects,
6 subjects with severe COPD, 13 with moderate COPD, and
12 CN subjects underwent isotropic volumetric
T1-weighted imaging and diffusion tensor imaging (DTI),
and arterial spin labeling perfusion imaging. Voxel-based
statistical analyses among groups were performed on
brain volumes, fractional anisotropy (FA) and trace, and
CBF by ANOVA tests.
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3649. |
42 |
Micro-structural
alterations in the brain of well-treated HIV+ patients with
minor neurocognitive disorders: a multi-contrast MRI study
at 3T.
Cristina Granziera1,2, Alessandro Daducci3,
Samanta Simioni1, Matthias Cavassini4,
Alexis Roche2, Djalel Meskaldij3,
Melanie Michel5, Alexandra Calmy6,
Bernard Hirschel6, Gunnar Krueger2,7,
and Renaud Du-Pasquier1
1Department of clinical neurosciences, CHUV,
Lausanne, VD, Switzerland, 2Advanced
clinical imaging technology, EPFL, Lausanne, VD,
Switzerland, 3EPFL
STI IEL LTS5, EPFL, Lausanne, VD, Switzerland, 4Department
of infectious diseases, CHUV, Lausanne, VD, Switzerland, 5Neuropsychology,
HUG, Geneva, Switzerland, 6Infectious
diseases, HUG, Geneva, Switzerland, 7Heathcare
sector IM&WS S, Siemens Schweiz AG, Renens, VD,
Switzerland
Since the introduction of highly active antiretroviral
therapies, the prognosis of HIV patients has improved
but the prevalence of minor neurocognitive disorders (MND)
has increased. In this study, we used a multi-contrast
MRI approach at 3T, to assess brain micro-structural
characteristics in MND+ HIV+ patients, MND- HIV+
patients and healthy controls (HC). Our findings show
the presence of micro-structural brain alterations in
MND+ patients compared to MND- and HC, suggesting loss
of structural integrity. In addition, they suggest that
a multi-contrast MRI approach at high field may be a
powerful approach to understand the physiopathology of
MND.
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3650. |
43 |
Age related morphometric
and metabolic changes in pediatric brains
Hedok Lee1, Zvi Jacob1, Haifang Li2,
Ruth Reinsel1, Shaonan Zhang1, and
Helene Benveniste1
1Anesthesiology, State University of New York
at Stony Brook, Stony Brook, New York, United States, 2Radiology,
State University of New York at Stony Brook, Stony
Brook, New York
There is little information about brain growth and
metabolic changes in children less than 8 years of age.
We employed computerized whole brain analysis to analyze
age related morphometric changes, in addition to
characterizing metabolic status using proton magnetic
resonance spectroscopy (1HMRS) in children 2-7 years of
age. We found structures belonging to the limbic system
and motor control are prominent areas of structural
growth during this period while metabolite
concentrations appear to be relatively stable during the
brain maturation.
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3651. |
44 |
Evidence for Larger Extra
Ventricular Cranial CSF Volume in Idiopathic Intracranial
Hypertension
Noam Alperin1, Sudarshan Ranganathan1,
Potyra Aroucha1, Alexis Morante2,
Joshua Pasol1, and Byron L Lam1
1University of Miami, Miami, FL, United
States, 2University
of Miami
Idiopathic intracranial hypertension (IIH) is
characterized by elevated intracranial pressure (ICP) of
unknown cause. It is widely accepted that IIH is
associated with impaired absorption of CSF. Impaired CSF
absorption is also the assumed cause for normal pressure
hydrocephalous in the elderly. However, unlike
hydrocephalous, brain ventricles remain small in IIH.
Therefore, if IIH is indeed associated with impaired
absorption, an increased extra ventricular CSF volume is
expected in IIH. Intra and extra ventricular Cranial CSF
volumes have been assessed in cohorts of IIH patients
and matches control subjects to verify if this is indeed
the case.
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3652. |
45 |
Evidence for typical and
atypical gray and white matter pathology in frontal lobe
epilepsy and different types of temporal lobe epilepsy
Susanne G. Mueller1, Karl Young2,
Michael M. Weiner2, and Kenneth D. Laxer3
1Center for Imaging of Neurodegenerative
Diseases, San Francisco, CA, United States, 2Center
for Imaging of Neurodegenerative Diseases, 3Pacific
Epilepsy Program, California Pacifc Medical Center
Synopsis: Voxel-based image analysis approaches,
demonstrated different, characteristic abnormality
patterns different types of non-lesional partial
epilepsy. It is unknown to what degree these patterns
exist in individual patients. A two-level multi-modality
imaging Bayesian network approach is used with the
following aims: 1. to characterize the subtype specific
structural abnormalities in non-lesional TLE-MTS, TLE-no
and FLE using GAMMA. 2. to the second-level Bayesian
network which allows for a robust imaging based subtype
classification of single subjects by combining the
information obtained at the first level. 3. to identify
typical, e.g. FLE gray, and atypical patterns in TLE-MTS,
TLE-no and FLE.
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3653. |
46 |
Global and Regional Mean
Diffusivity Changes in Patients with Obstructive Sleep Apnea
Rajesh Kumar1, Alexa Chavez1, Paul
M Macey2,3, Mary A Woo2, Frisca L
Yan-Go4, and Ronald M Harper1,3
1Neurobiology, University of California at
Los Angeles, Los Angeles, CA, United States, 2UCLA
School of Nursing, University of California at Los
Angeles, Los Angeles, CA, United States, 3Brain
Research Institute, University of California at Los
Angeles, Los Angeles, CA, United States, 4Neurology,
University of California at Los Angeles, Los Angeles,
CA, United States
Obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) patients show brain injury
in autonomic, cognitive, and mood regulatory regions;
however, it is unknown whether the predominant pathology
is acute or chronic in newly-diagnosed, treatment-naïve
OSA subjects. We examined global and regional
mean-diffusivity (MD), which measures average water
diffusion within tissue and is capable of
differentiating acute from chronic changes, in
newly-diagnosed OSA subjects. Global MD values were
reduced in OSA, reflected as localized changes in
multiple brain sites, and included medullary, cerebellar,
basal-ganglia, and limbic regions. The pathological
state in newly-diagnosed OSA subjects likely represents
acute pathological processes in tissue, possibly induced
by hypoxia.
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3654. |
47 |
Structural abnormalities
in the thalamus of migraine patients: a multi-parametric
study at high field.
Cristina Granziera1,2, Alessandro Daducci3,
David Romascano2, Alexis Roche2,
Gunther Helms4, Gunnar Krueger2,5,
and Nouchine Hadjikhani6,7
1Department of clinical neurosciences, CHUV,
Lausanne, VD, Switzerland, 2Advanced
clinical imaging technology, EPFL, Lausanne, VD,
Switzerland,3ST/IEL/LTS5, EPFL, Lausanne, VD,
Switzerland, 4Dept.
of Cognitive Neurology, MR-Research in Neurology and
Psychiatry, Goettingen, Germany,5Healthcare
Sector IM&WS S, Siemens Schweiz AG, Renens, VD,
Switzerland, 6BMI/SV/GRHAD,
EPFL, Lausanne, Vd, Switzerland, 7Radiology,
Martinos center, MGH and Harvard medical school,
Charlestown, MA, Switzerland
The thalamus is an important relay of pain processing
pathways and exerts a pivotal role in cortical
excitability control. In this study, we examined the
structural characteristics of the thalamus in a group of
migraine patients and healthy controls using a
multi-parametric approach at high field MRI (3T). We
showed that patients suffering from migraine with aura
had different micro-structural features in numerous
thalamic nuclei compared to migraineurs without aura and
non-migraineurs, pointing at iron accumulation in some
thalamic nuclei and at increased cellular presence in
others. The observed alterations encompassed the somato-sensory,
limbic and visual thalamic regions.
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3655. |
48 |
An automated approach for
the quantification of brain oxygen metabolism
Peiying Liu1, Yan Cao2, Jinsoo Uh1,
and Hanzhang Lu1
1Advanced Imaging Research Center, University
of Texas Southwestern Medical Center, Dallas, Texas,
United States, 2Department
of Mathematical Science, University of Texas at Dallas,
Dallas, Texas, United States
CMRO2 is an important index of tissue viability and
brain function. A previous study proposed an MRI
technique to estimate whole-brain CMRO2 by combining
non-invasive measures of CBF, arterial and venous
oxygenation, which is fast and reliable. The only major
obstacle of this technique before wider applications is
the slice positioning of the phase-contrast MRI scans
for CBF measurement requires considerable training and
expertise. We developed an automatic positioning
algorithm for the phase-contrast MRI based on image
analysis of a time-of-flight angiogram, and thus provide
a turn-key solution for the quantitative evaluation of
the whole-brain CMRO2, which has minimal
operator-dependence.
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Electronic
Poster Session - Neuro B |
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Click on
to view
the abstract pdf and click on
to view the
video presentation. (Not all presentations are available.)
Wednesday 9 May 2012
Exhibition Hall |
11:00 - 12:00 |
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Computer # |
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3656. |
25 |
Translational BOLD fMRI in
mice and man: precinical and clinical treatment approaches
Andreas Hess1, Juergen Rech2, Arnd
Doerfler3, Georg Kollias4, Olaf
Sporns5, and Georg Schett2
1Institute of Experimental and Clinical
Pharmacology and Toxicology, FAU Erlangen-Nuremberg,
Erlangen, Germany, 2Department
of Internal Medicine 3, Erlangen, Germany, 3of
Neuroradiology, FAU Erlangen-Nuremberg, Erlangen,
Germany, 4Institute
of Immunology; Alexander Fleming Biomedical Sciences
Research Center, Vari, Greece, 5Department
of Psychological and Brain Sciences, Programs in
Neuroscience and Cognitive Science, Indiana, United
States
Pain is the key symptom in patients with arthritis. We
hypothesized that hypernociception due to chronic TNF
overexpression leads to an altered pain processing.
Using fMRI we demonstrated that mice overexpressing
human tumor necrosis factor (hTNF), as well as
rheumatoid arthritis patients exhibit more intensive
brain activity upon nociceptive stimuli.
Graph-theoretical connectivity analysis showed rewiring
under chronic pain conditions i.e. tight clustering of
thalamus and periaqueductal grey. Neutralization of TNF
by antibodies rapidly reversed this hypernociception in
mice and men. This similarity of pain related effects in
mouse and man facilitates a translational approach for
searching for novel analgesics.
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3657. |
26 |
Investigation of the
chronic effect of streptozotocin-induced diabetes on
cerebrovascular reactivity and BOLD fmri response to
electrical forepaw stimulation
Edward S. Hui1, Shiliang Huang2,
Yen-Yu Shih2, and Timothy Q. Duong2
1Dept of Radiology, Medical University of
South Carolina, Charleston, South Carolina, United
States, 2Research
Imaging Institute, UTHSCSA, San Antonio, Texas, United
States
Somatosensory responses to nociceptive and non-nociceptive
stimuli were altered in the peripheral nervous system (PNS)
of diabetic rats (first month after STZ injection) and
patients. However, more evidences suggested that the
central nervous system (CNS) was also involved. For
instance, the evoked potential amplitude in S1 was
reduced at 8 weeks of diabetes. Furthermore, a resting
state fMRI, which examines neuronal connectivity, study
showed impairment of the attention network to external
stimuli in diabetic patientm. The goal of the current
study was therefore to examine the longitudinal and
chronic effect of diabetes on CNS using fMRI and CO2
challenge.
|
3658. |
27 |
"Form Follows Function":
Anatomic and Functional Localization of Eloquent Cortex
Mai-Lan Ho1, Rafael Rojas1, and
David Hackney1
1Radiology, BIDMC, Boston, MA, United States
The purposes of this exhibit are: 1. Describe imaging
signs of major cortical regions on conventional CT and
MR, with attention to the central sulcus and surrounding
anatomic landmarks. 2. Establish the validity of
anatomic techniques for localizing eloquent cortex,
based on correlation to functional MRI (fMRI) activation
maps in selected case studies. 3. Identify scenarios in
which technical, patient, and lesion factors may limit
anatomic and/or functional characterization.
|
3659. |
28 |
Effectiveness of four
different clinical language paradigms for language
lateralization: a ROI analysis
Domenico Zacá1, Joshua Nickerson2,
Gerard Deib1, and Jay J Pillai1
1Division of Neuroradiology Johns Hopkins
University School of Medicine, Baltimore, MD, United
States, 2Division
of Neuroradiology, The University of Vermont School of
Medicine, Burlington, VT, United States
Language hemispheric dominance determined by BOLD fMRI
can depend on the paradigm as well as the region of
interest (ROI) considered for the lateralization index
(LI) computation. In this retrospective study of 41
brain tumor patients referred for presurgical language
mapping we compared the effectiveness of lateralization
of four language tasks in anatomical and functional
language ROIs. Two expressive tasks, rhyming and silent
word generation, were the best lateralizing tasks in
expressive ROIs, whereas the receptive and semantic
tasks, sentence completion and listening comprehension,
did not perform better than the expressive tasks for
lateralization in receptive ROIs.
|
3660. |
29 |
Cerebrovascular reactivity
(CVR) mapping in patients with low grade gliomas undergoing
presurgical mapping with BOLD fMRI
Domenico Zacá1, and Jay J Pillai1
1Division of Neuroradiology, Johns Hopkins
University School of Medicine, Baltimore, MD, United
States
Angiogenesis in high grade gliomas often causes
neurovascular uncoupling (NVU), making detection of
eloquent cortex near these lesions difficult by BOLD
fMRI. Little is known about the prevalence of NVU in low
grade gliomas not characterized by angiogenesis. In this
study 8 patients with low grade gliomas demonstrated
ipsilesional reduced motor activation and reduced
cerebrovascular reactivity (CVR) following a breath hold
(BH) task compared to contralesional homologous areas.
These results demonstrate the impact of NVU on
presurgical BOLD fMRI activation maps in these patients
and the utility of BH CVR for detection of potential NVU.
|
3661. |
30 |
COGNITIVE REHABILITATION
MODIFIES FUNCTIONAL CONNECTIVITY OF THE ANTERIOR CINGULATE
CORTEX IN MULTIPLE SCLEROSIS
Paola Valsasina1, Maria A. Rocca2,
Letizia Panicari2, Gianna Riccitelli2,
Flavia Mattioli3, Ruggero Capra4,
Chiara Stampatori3, Giancarlo Comi5,
and Massimo Filippi1
1Neuroimaging Research Unit, Institute of
Experimental Neurology, San Raffaele Scientific
Institute and Vita-Salute San Raffaele University,
Milan, Italy, Italy, 2Neuroimaging
Research Unit, Institute of Experimental Neurology, San
Raffaele Scientific Institute and Vita-Salute San
Raffaele University, Milan, Italy, 3Clinical
Neuropsychology Unit, Spedali Civili of Brescia,
Brescia, Italy, 4Multiple
Sclerosis Centre, Spedali Civili of Brescia, Brescia,
Italy, 5Department
of Neurology, San Raffaele Scientific Institute and
Vita-Salute San Raffaele University, Milan, Italy, Italy
In this study, we used seed-voxel correlation analysis
to investigate resting state (RS) functional
connectivity (FC) of the anterior cingulate cortex (ACC)
in two groups of patients with multiple sclerosis (MS):
a treatment group, performing 12 weeks of cognitive
rehabilitation of attention/information processing and
executive functions, and a control group. At follow up,
increased FC between the ACC, the right middle frontal
gyrus and inferior parietal lobe was detected in the
treated group, while decreased FC between the ACC, the
cerebellum and the middle temporal gyrus was detected in
the control group.
|
3662. |
31 |
A Whole-Brain Network
Analysis in Patients With Hereditary and Acquired Peripheral
Neuropathy
Maria A. Rocca1, Paola Valsasina1,
Raffaella Fazio2, Stefano Previtali2,
Elisabetta Pagani1, Andrea Falini3,
Giancarlo Comi2, and Massimo Filippi1
1Neuroimaging Research Unit, Institute of
Experimental Neurology, San Raffaele Scientific
Institute and Vita-Salute San Raffaele University,
Milan, Italy, Italy, 2Department
of Neurology, San Raffaele Scientific Institute and
Vita-Salute San Raffaele University, Milan, Italy,
Italy, 3Department
of Neuroradiology, San Raffaele Scientific Institute and
Vita-Salute San Raffaele University, Milan, Italy
We assessed functional connectivity (FC) at resting
state (RS) in 25 patients with acquired (A) and
hereditary (H) peripheral neuropathy (PN). Compared with
controls, PN patients showed decreased FC in the
secondary visual network and increased FC in the
auditory network. Moreover, APN patients showed
decreased FC in the motor, default mode and salience
networks. Conversely, increased FC was found in the
salience network of HPN patients. Enhanced inter-network
connectivity among sensory and motor networks was found
in both PN patient groups vs. controls. Such an
enhancement was more evident in HPN than in APN
patients.
|
3663. |
32 |
Brain activation on sexual
orientation in female-to-male transsexuals: A functional MR
imaging study
Tae-Hoon Kim1, Seok-Kwun Kim2, and
Gwang-Woo Jeong1,3
1Research Institute of Medical Imaging,
Chonnam National University Medical School, Gwangju,
Korea, 2Plastic
and Reconstructive Surgery, Dong-A University Hospital,
Busan, Korea, 3Radiology,
Chonnam National University Medical School, Gwangju,
Korea
Present inferences postulate that the perception of the
own sex is linked to sexual differentiation of the brain
and that perception in transsexuals differs from the
body phenotype. Such a discrepancy is believed to be
possible because sex differentiation of the brain occurs
later in development than sex differentiation of
genitals. Therefore, this implies that neuroanatomy
plays a important role in determining transsexualism or
gender identity. Recently, Gizewski et al. reported that
male-to-female (MtF) transsexuals showed specific
cerebral activation in response to visual erotic
stimuli, indicating a tendency of female-like cerebral
processing in transsexualism. However, female-to-male (FtM)
transsexuals are little known. Therefore, this study was
to evaluate the brain activation in response to visual
erotic stimuli for cross-gender identity in FtM
transsexuals by using fMRI.
|
3664. |
33 |
Semantic and lexical
language deficits in left temporal lobe epilepsy patients
using BOLD
Senthil S Kumaran1, Kapil Chaudhary2,
Manjari Tripathi2, and Sarat Chandra3
1Department of N.M.R., All India Institute of
Medical Sciences, New Delhi, Delhi, India, 2Department
of Neurology, All India Institute of Medical Sciences,
New Delhi, Delhi, India, 3Department
of NeuroSurgery, All India Institute of Medical
Sciences, New Delhi, Delhi, India
Left temporal lobe epilepsy (LTLE) is a common cause of
mesial temporal sclerosis (MTS) which affects the
language networks. In this study we evaluated the
presurgical language deficits with increasing complexity
from semantic to lexical components in LTLE patients due
to MTS using BOLD.
|
3665. |
34 |
Functional connectivity
analysis reveals disrupted interhemispheric connectivity in
unilateral neocortical epilepsy
Edward J Novotny1,2, Andrew Poliakov3,
Sandra Poliachik3, Seth Friedman3,
Dennis Shaw3, and Jeffrey Ojemann1,4
1Pediatrics, University of Washington,
Seattle, WA, United States, 2Neurology,
University of Washington, Seattle, WA, United States, 3Radiology,
Seattle Children's Hospital, Seattle, WA, United States, 4Neurosurgery,
University of Washington, Seattle, WA
Functional connectivity MRI (fcMRI) – an analysis
technique based on task-free, resting state fMRI
recording -- can demonstrate disruption of connectivity
in certain disease states, including epilepsy. We found
that interhemispheric connectivity of resting state
networks are clearly disrupted in a group of subjects
being evaluated for surgical treatment of their
epilepsy. These findings demonstrate that this technique
may be important as part of the evaluation of subjects
with epilepsy and used to investigate the relationship
to surgical outcome and comorbid neuropsychological
disturbances.
|
3666. |
35 |
Resting State Functional
Connectivity in Tuberous Sclerosis Complex and Refractory
Epilepsy
Ahmad Mohamed1,2, Richard Masterton2,3,
John Archer2,3, David Abbot2,3,
Michael Kean4, Simon Harvey1,3,
and Graeme Jackson2,3
1Department of Neurology, Royal Children's
Hospital, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia, 2Brain
Research Institute, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia, 3Department
of Medicine, University of Melbourne, Victoria,
Australia, 4Medical
Imaging Department, Royal Children's Hospital,
Melbourne, Victoria, Australia
This study aimed to test if functional connectivity (FC)
can be used to differentiate epileptogenic from non-epileptogenic
cortical tubers in four children with tuberous sclerosis
complex and refractory seizures. FC was assessed using
partial correlation between band-pass filtered (0.01-0.1
Hz) fMRI signal time-courses averaged within
regions-of-interest placed in tubers, thalami and
posterior default mode network (DMN) regions. No
statistically significant difference in tuber-tuber,
tuber-thalami and tuber-DMN FC was noted at either
individual or group level. The few subjects, imaging
under general anaesthesia and lack of simultaneous EEG
recording potentially limit the study.
|
3667. |
36 |
Relationship between gray
matter concentration and resting functional connectivity to
the thalamus: Evidence of the temporal lobe epilepsy seizure
network
Martha J Holmes1,2, Zhaohua Ding1,2,
Xue Yang3, Bennett A Landman2,3,
John C Gore1,2, Bassel Abou-Khalil4,
Hasan H Sonmezturk4, and Victoria L Morgan1,2
1Radiology and Radiological Sciences,
Vanderbilt University, Nashville, TN, United States, 2Institute
of Imaging Science, Vanderbilt University, Nashville,
TN, United States, 3Electrical
Engineering, Vanderbilt University, Nashville, TN,
United States, 4Neurology,
Vanderbilt University, Nashville, TN, United States
Temporal lobe epilepsy (TLE) is associated with gray
matter loss and changes in functional connectivity. The
objective of our analysis is to examine the voxel-wise
relationship between gray matter concentration (GMC) and
resting state functional connectivity to the thalamus in
TLE. We found the following: a cluster in the left
precuneus/posterior cingulate demonstrated increased
negative connectivity to the left thalamus as GMC
decreased, and a cluster in the left putamen/insula
displayed increased connectivity as GMC decreased in the
thalamus. The changes in GMC and functional connectivity
in these structures provides further evidence of their
involvement in the TLE seizure network.
|
3668. |
37 |
Tactile perception and
Braille semantic task in late blind subjects using fMRI:
understanding Braille dots and objects
Ankeeta Sharma1, Senthil S Kumaran1,
and Rohit Saxena2
1Department of N.M.R., All India Institute of
Medical Sciences, New Delhi, Delhi, India, 2Dr.R.P.
Centre for Ophthalmic Sciences, All India Institute of
Medical Sciences, New Delhi, Delhi, India
The loss of one sensory modality results in an increased
use of the remaining intact sensory systems; to improve
their efficiency, and may result in cortical
reorganization processes. We evaluated tactile
preception in relation to language reading (using
Braille input) in late blind subjects, to understand how
they differentiate braille dots from the shapes and
objects.
|
3669. |
38 |
Mapping the different
asymmetry of normal controls and first episode drug naïve
schzophrenia patients by Voxel-Based Morphometry
Ling Zou1, Wei Deng2, Tao Li2,
and Qiyong Gong3
1Radiology, West China Hospital,Sichuan
Uiversity, Chengdu, Sichuan, China, 2psychiatry,
West China Hospital,Sichuan Uiversity, 3CMRRC,
Radiology Department, West China Hospital,Sichuan
Uiversity
Asymmetry of two halves of brain is recognized as a
fundamental property and the basis for optimal brain
function division. Abnormal asymmetry that may generated
in early stage of neurodevelopment was found in
schizophrenia patients. However, most studies used the
ROI based analysis, which resulted in the failure of
exploring overall asymmetry changes. We applied
optimized voxel based morphometry (VBM) study on the
level of whole brain in normal controls and
first-episode, antipsychotic-naive schizophrenia
patients, consequently observed overall lateralization
patterns and their decease and aberrance in
schizophrenia patients. Future study is necessary to
gain further insight into our findings.
|
3670. |
39 |
Atypical auditory-visual
integration mechanism in Borderline Personality Disorder: A
fMRI analysis using emotional congruence and incongruence in
music and facial images
Jeong-Won Jeong1, Jeffrey G Kuentzel2,
Vibhav A Diwadkar3, Carla D Chugani4,
Varun Shandal5, Harry T Chugani6,
and Diane C Chugani7
1Pediatrics and Neurology, Wayne State
University, Detroit, MI, United States, 2Psychology,
Wayne State University, 3Behavioral
Neuroscience, Wayne State University, 4Counseling
and Psychological Services, Florida Gulf Coast
University, 5PET
center, Wayne State University, 6Pediatrics,
Neurology, and Radiology, Wayne State University, 7Pediatrics
and Radiology, Wayne State University
Borderline personality disorder (BPD) is a prevalent
mental illness characterized by pervasive instability in
emotion, interpersonal relationships, self-image, and
behavior. The hallmark features of BPD are affective
instability and severe mood swings but there have been
few functional imaging studies to investigate neuronal
substrates underlying these features in BPD patients.
Our previous fMRI study reported that there were
significant Blood Oxygen Level Dependent (BOLD) signal
increases in the superior temporal gyrus (STG) and
fusiform gyrus (FG) of healthy young adults, which
respond to emotionally congruent and incongruent
music-face images, respectively. We presume that these
BOLD gains in STG and FG underlie emotion perception
that responds to emotional congruence in multi-modal
sensory inputs. This study extends our fMRI technique to
examine how STG and FG of BPD patients respond to
emotionally paired music-face images, which might
provide a mechanism related to elevated response to
emotional stimuli.
|
3671. |
40 |
Altered Cerebral Effective
Connectivity in Theory-of-Mind in Autism Spectrum Disorders
Karthik Ramakrishnan Sreenivasan1,
Gopikrishna Deshpande1,2, Hrishikesh
Deshpande3, and Rajesh K Kana4
1AU MRI Research Center,Department of
Electrical and Computer Engineering, Auburn University,
Auburn, Alabama, United States, 2Department
of Psychology, Auburn University, Auburn, Alabama,
United States, 3Department
of Biomedical Engineering, University of Alabama,
Birmingham, Alabama, United States, 4Department
of Psychology, University of Alabama, Birmingham,
Alabama, United States
The current study focuses on effective brain
connectivity in an fMRI study of Theory-of-Mind (ToM) in
high-functioning adults with autism. fMRI time series
were first deconvolved with cubature Kalman filter and
then the underlying neuronal states subsequently input
to a multivariate autoregressive model for finding
effective connectivity paths. The results showed that
connectivity between ToM regions was greater in control
as compared to Autism and those paths mediated the
relationship between subject category (control/autism)
and behavioral metrics such as Autism Quotient and Mind
in the Eyes score.
|
3672. |
41 |
Disturbed Brain Complex
Network in Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder
Meilin Liang1, Pan Lin1, Ming
Zhang2, Chengyu Li1, Xin Liu1,
Chenwang Jin2, and Chen Niu2
1Key Laboratory of Biomedical Information
Engineering of Education Ministry, Xian Jiaotong
University, Xi'an, Shaanxi, China, 2Department
of Medical Imaging, the First Affiliated Hospital of
Medical College,Xian Jiaotong University, Xi'an,
Shaanxi, China
Attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) is a
commonly observed neurobehavioral disorders of
childhood, but its pathogenic mechanism is still
unclear. The graph theory deals with the whole brain as
a complex network that owns its unique topological
properties. It supplies a novel insight into the
investigating of human brain network to find how ADHD
affect the brain function. The purpose of this study was
to investigate the topological properties of complex
network in ADHD, and find the disturbed connectivity
regions of ADHD patients¡¯ brain using graph theory.
|
3673. |
42 |
Altered Default Mode
Network Functional Connectivity in Amyotrophic Lateral
Sclerosis
Pan Lin1, Ming Zhang2, Chenwang
Jin2, Cuiping Mao2, Chen Niu2,
Xin Liu1, Zhigang Min2, Qiaoting
Jin3, and Jingxia Dang3
1Key Laboratory of Biomedical Information
Engineering of Education Ministry,Xi'an Jiaotong
University, Xi'an, Shannxi, China, 2Department
of Medical Imaging, the First Affiliated Hospital of
Medical College,Xian Jiaotong University, Xi'an,
Shaanxi, China, 3Department
of Neurology, the First Affiliated Hospital of Xian
Jiaotong University, Xi'an, Shaanxi, China
Characterization of the default mode network as a
complex network of functionally interacting dynamic
systems has received great interest for clinical
application. ALS is a progresssive disease that is
associated with motor disorder. Little is know about how
ALS affects the defualt mode network. The aim of this
study is to assess the complex network of DMN while in
the resting state, which can provide greated insight
into how DMN functional networks are affected by ALS.
|
3674. |
43 |
Evaluation of auditory
processing in blind people: a comparison of semantic and
auditory perception
Ankeeta Sharma1, Senthil S Kumaran1,
and Rohit Saxena2
1Department of N.M.R., All India Institute of
Medical Sciences, New Delhi, Delhi, India, 2Dr.R.P.
Centre for Ophthalmic Sciences, All India Institute of
Medical Sciences, New Delhi, Delhi, India
Blind Children show altered brain activity in early
visual cortex and develop their hearing better to
compensate the loss of vision. We evaluated BOLD
activity due to sounds, orientation and semantic
processing through auditory cues in late blind subjects.
Auditory and perception discrimination showed
cross-modal activity in visual cortex, suggesting that
reorganization may be limited to perception and less
affected by attention.
|
3675. |
44 |
Functional MRI of Working
Memory in Patients of Mild Traumatic Brain Injury
Yen-Peng Liao1, Chi-Jen Chen1,
Chih-Hsiung Wu2, Hui-Ling Hsu1,
Ying-Chi Tseng1, Ho-Ling Liu3, and
Wen-Ta Chiu4
1Department of Medical Imaging, Taipei
Medical University - Shuang Ho Hospital, New Taipei
City, Taiwan, Taiwan, 2Surgery,
Taipei Medical University - Shuang Ho Hospital, New
Taipei City, Taiwan, Taiwan, 3Medical
Imaging and Radiological Sciences, Chang Gung
University, Taoyuan County, Taiwan, Taiwan, 4Graduate
Institute of Injury Prevention and Control, Taipei
Medical University, Taipei City, Taiwan
Previous functional MRI studies of mild traumatic brain
injury (MTBI) patients have indeed shown altered
patterns of activation during working memory (WM) task.
However, the results were inconsistent. This study aimed
to analyze the brain activation patterns in response to
n-back WM loads after MTBI. The results showed that MTBI-induced
differences in WM functional activity were observed in
the absence of differences in neuropsychological
performance, suggesting that this approach may increase
sensitivity to MTBI compared with neuropsychological
evaluation alone. The results also lend further evidence
to the potential for cerebral plasticity to maintain
performance levels on WM tasks after MTBI.
|
3676. |
45 |
Withdrawn |
3677. |
46 |
Defrosting Parkinson’s
disease: exploring the neural correlates of freezing of
gait.
James M Shine1, Philip Ward2, Elie
Matar1, Sharon Naismith1, and
Simon Lewis1
1Brain and Mind Research Institute, The
University of Sydney, Sydney, NSW, Australia, 2School
of Psychiatry, The University of New South Wales
Freezing of gait (FOG) is a devastating symptom of
advanced Parkinson’s disease in which patients suddenly
feel as though their feet have become “stuck to the
ground”. Despite a well-characterised clinical
phenotype, the condition remains poorly understood. To
remedy this, we have combined fMRI with a novel virtual
reality walking paradigm, allowing the safe recreation
of freezing of gait episodes and the subsequent
exploration of the neural correlates of these episodes.
In a cohort of 16 patients, we found robust patterns of
activation that were consistent with the predictions of
a recently-proposed model.
|
3678. |
47 |
Brain activation patterns
and brain volume changes associated with explicit retrieval
of unpleasant and neutral words in patients with obsessive
compulsive disorder
Shin-Eui Park1, Gwang-Won Kim2,
Jong-Chul Yang3, Gyung-Ho Jeong4,
Heoung-Keun Kang2, and Gwang-Woo Jeong1,2
1Interdisciplinary Program of Biomedical
Engineering, Chonnam National University, Gwang Ju,
Korea, 2Radiology,
Chonnam National University Medical School, Gwang Ju,
Korea, 3psychiatry,
Chonbuk national University medical school, 4Radiology,
Chonbuk national University Medical school
Obsessive compulsive disorder (OCD) is an anxiety
disorder characterized by intrusive thoughts that
produce uneasiness, apprehension, fear, or worry, by
repetitive behaviors aimed at reducing the associated
anxiety, or by a combination of such obsessions and
compulsions so the author attempts to investigate about
explicit memory of Obsessive compulsive disorder
|
|
|
Electronic
Poster Session - Neuro B |
|
Click on
to view
the abstract pdf and click on
to view the
video presentation. (Not all presentations are available.)
Wednesday 9 May 2012
Exhibition Hall |
10:00 - 11:00 |
|
|
|
Computer # |
|
3679. |
49 |
Contributions of in-plane
CSF flow to the derivation of intracranial compliance: a
three-direction cine phase-contrast flow study.
Yi-Ying Wu1,2, Yu-Wei Tang3,
Hsu-Hsia Peng4, Cheng-Wen Ko5,
Cheng-Wen Ko5,6, Hsiao-Wen Chung7,8,
and Teng-Yi Huang3
1Biomedical Electronics and Bioinformatics,
National Taiwan University, Taipei,Taiwan, Taiwan, 2National
Taiwan University, Taipei,Taiwan, Taiwan, Taiwan, 3National
Taiwan University of Science and Technology, 4National
Tsing Hua University, 5Computer
Science and Engineering, National Sun Yat-Sen
University, 6National
Sun Yat-Sen University, 7Biomedical
Electronics and Bioinformatics, National Taiwan
University, 8National
Taiwan University
Previous studies have proposed noninvasive
phase-contrast flow mapping magnetic resonance imaging
method to estimate ICC based on blood/CSF flow rates and
CSF pressure gradient. Assuming that the CSF flow
direction is mainly caudocranial in the spinal canal at
the measurement sites, the phase-contrast technique
needs to be applied with only one velocity encoding
direction, which greatly shortens the scan time. In this
study, we attempted to verify this assumption by using
three-direction measurements to examine the
contributions of various terms that might cause
estimation inaccuracies in MR imaging-based ICC
measurements.
|
3680. |
50 |
Estimation of perilymph
enhancement after intrarympanic administration of Gd-DTPA by
fast T1-mapping with dual flip angle 3D-spoiled gradient
echo sequence
Shinji Naganawa1, Masahiro Yamazaki1,
Hisashi Kawai1, and Tsutomu Nakashima2
1Department of Radiology, Nagoya University
Graduate School of Medicine, Nagoya, Aichi, Japan, 2Department
of Otorhynolaryngology, Nagoya University Graduate
School of Medicine, Nagoya, Aichi, Japan
FT1 mapping by 3D-GRE can predict poor enhancement of
inner ear after intratympanic Gd injection, therefore
unnecessary long MR scans can be avoided.
|
3681. |
51 |
Signal intensity changes
of the cochlea in patients with cerebellopontine meningioma
on isotropic 3D fluid-attenuated inversion recovery MR
imaging at 3 T; comparison with vestibular schwannoma
Jin Wook Choi1, Hyung-Jin Kim1,
Sung Tae Kim1, Pyoung Jeon1, Keon
Ha Kim1, and Hong Sik Byun1
1Radiology, Samsung Medical Center, Kangnamgu,
Seoul, Korea
The signal intensity (SI) of the labyrinth in patients
with vestibular schwannoma (VS) is known to be increased
on FLAIR MRI due to increased protein concentration
within the perilymph. We compared SI changes of the
cochlear in patients with cerebellopontine angle (CPA)
meningioma with VS on 3D FLAIR imaging. The SIs of the
cochlear in patients with CPA/IAC meningioma are
significantly lower than those in patients with VS on 3D
FLAIR imaging. There may exist more complex mechanisms
other than mechanical obstruction of the IAC to explain
the cause of increased protein concentration in the
perilymph in patients with VS.
|
3682. |
52 |
Kinetic Analysis of DCE-MRI
in Head and Neck by Using the Dynamic Tracer Concentration
in Jugular Veins
Jing Yuan1, Steven Kwok Keung Chow1,
David Ka Wai Yeung1, Anil T Ahuja1,
and Ann D King1
1Imaging and Interventional Radiology, The
Chinese University of Hong Kong, Shatin, NT, Hong Kong
Dynamic tracer concentration in veins, although as blood
collecting vessels, was proposed as a mathematical input
function for head and neck DCE-MRI kinetic analysis to
compensate for the arterial blood in-flow effect. The
tracer concentration in veins and arteries should be
theoretically equal in a single-pool and
low-permeability model. Dynamic
concentration-time-curves (CTCs) in arteries and veins
were used for Tofts parameter estimation. Remarkable
inter-slice concentration differences were found in
arteries and resulted in considerable parameter
estimation inconsistency. As comparison, the in-flow
effect was significantly reduced and consistent kinetic
parameter estimation was achieved by using the venous
CTCs.
|
3683. |
53 |
Efficacy of
diffusion-weighted MR imaging and PET/CT for predicting
tumor response to chemoradiation therapy in squamous cell
carcinoma of head and neck
Munetaka Matoba1, Yasuaki Kuginuki1,
Ichiro Toyoda1, Naoto Watanabe1,
and Hisao Tonami1
1radiology, kanazawa medical university,
daigaku 1-1, Ishikawa, Japan
Purpose : To evaluate the efficacy of ADC and SUV for
prediction of treatment response to chemoradiotherapy in
squamous cell carcinoma of head and neck. Methods : DWI
was performed before treatment, and 3 weeks after the
start of treatment (3w-Tx). PET/CT was performed before
treatment. The relationship between the RECIST and
imaging parameters was examined. Results : The change in
ADC within 3w-Tx and SUV significantly correlated with
the tumor decrease. The CR group showed significantly
higher increase in ADC of 3w-Tx than the PR group.
Conclusion : ADC and SUV may be used for prediction of
tumor response.
|
3684. |
54 |
Non-Gaussian Analysis of
Diffusion-Weighted Imaging in Nasopharyngeal Carcinoma at 3T
Jing Yuan1, Steven Kwok Keung Chow1,
David Ka Wai Yeung1, Yujia Li1,
Anil T Ahuja1, and Ann D King1
1Imaging and Interventional Radiology, The
Chinese University of Hong Kong, Shatin, NT, Hong Kong
This pilot study is to investigate the feasibility of
non-Gaussian diffusion models, including diffusion
kurtosis imaging (DKI), stretched exponential model (SEM),
intravoxel incoherent motion (IVIM) and statistical
model, for 3T diffusion-weighted imaging (DWI) analysis
in patients with nasopharyngeal carcinoma (NPC). The
results showed that at an extended b-value range up to
1500s/mm2, all non-Gaussian models yielded better
diffusion signal fitting than the normal
mono-exponential model for both primary tumors and
metastatic nodes. Additional to the nominal diffusion
coefficient, other non-Gaussian parameters could be
extracted as potential biomarkers for NPC lesion
detection and characterization in clinical applications.
|
3685. |
55 |
Utility of high-resolution
readout-segmented diffusion weighted imaging of the parotid
gland
Shigeaki Umeoka1, Nobuko Morisawa1,
Masako Kataoka1, David Andrew Porter2,
and Kaori Togashi1
1Diagnostic Imaing & Nuclear Medicine,
Graduate School of Medicine, Kyoto University, Kyoto,
Kyoto, Japan, 2Siemens
AG, Erlangen, Germany
Read-out segmented echo-planar imaging (RS-EPI) combined
with 2D-navigator-based reacquision has been recently
established with high resolution with distortion-free,
reduced susceptibility artifact and blurring from T2*
signal decay compared to conventional single-shot EPI
(SS-EPI). RS-EPI DWI of the central neural system has
been documented to improve image quality. In our study,
RS-EPI DWI could reduce susceptibility artifact and
provide better delineation and visualization of internal
structure of the parotid gland. Although further
improvement might be necessary to shorten the scan time,
this newly-developed RS-EPI MRI could be a promising
tool to visualize and evaluate the head & neck organs.
|
3686. |
56 |
MR Elastography of
Salivary Gland Masses: Preliminary Results
Kunwar Bhatia1, Philippe Garteiser2,
Ralph Sinkus2, David Yeung3, Jing
Yuan1, Yolanda Lee3, Ann King1,
and Anil Ahuja1
1Imaging and Interventional Radiology,
Chinese University of Hong Kong, Shatin, N.T., Hong
Kong, 2Department
of Radiology and INSERM U773,3Imaging and
Interventional Radiology, Prince of Wales Hospital,
Shatin, N.T., Hong Kong
Problem: Conventional imaging has suboptimal diagnostic
accuracy for salivary masses. Methods: A study of MR
elastography was conducted in nine patients with
cytologically-confirmed salivary tumours using a
customized mechanical driver and gradient echo MR
sequences with fractional motion encoding. Recovered
shear moduli (|G*| stiffness) for tumours and normal
contralateral glands (controls) were compared using
t-tests. Results: Pooled data of |G*| in tumours
(0.83±0.47 kPa) overlapped with controls (0.59±0.32
kPa)(p=0.23). However, ratios of |G*|tumour:|G*|control
for individual patients exceeded 1 in 8/9 cases
(1.41±0.37, p=0.01). Conclusion: Preliminary results
suggests that normalized shear moduli on MRE may
differentiate salivary tumours from normal glands.
|
3687. |
57 |
Real-time MRI of Speaking:
Preliminary Experience at a Temporal Resolution of 33ms
Aaron Niebergall1, Shuo Zhang1,
Martin Uecker1,2, and Jens Frahm1
1Biomedizinische NMR Forschungs GmbH am
Max-Planck-Institut fuer biophysikalische Chemie,
Goettingen, Germany, 2Electrical
Engineering and Computer Science, University of
California, Berkeley, California, United States
Previous dynamic studies of speaking mechanism using MRI
suffer mainly from susceptibility artifacts and
insufficient temporal resolution. Here, we applied the
recently introduced real-time MRI technique based on
radial FLASH acquisition and nonlinear inverse
reconstruction. Typical images had an in-plane
resolution of 1.5 mm and acquisition times of 33 ms (30
fps), and are free from susceptibility or motion
artifacts. The movies successfully resolved the rapid
and coordinated movements of the main articulators such
as the lips, tongue, velum and vocal folds, during
production of vowels, consonants, words and sentences.
It thus promises a useful tool to study speech
production.
|
3688.
|
58 |
Measurement of upper
airway compliance using dynamic MRI
Yoon-Chul Kim1, Ximing Wang2,
Winston Tran2, Michael C.K. Khoo2,
and Krishna S. Nayak1
1Electrical Engineering, University of
Southern California, Los Angeles, CA, United States, 2Biomedical
Engineering, University of Southern California, Los
Angeles, CA, United States
In research studies of obstructive sleep apnea, upper
airway (UA) compliance (related to the amount of change
in UA cross-sectional area per unit pressure) is a
measure of airway collapsibility. Fiberoptic endoscopy
is used to measure the area but is invasive. We present
a new MR imaging protocol that simultaneously acquires
dynamic airway images and physiological signals and is
compatible with an external airway occlusion setup. UA
compliance was measured after synchronization of the UA
area and mask pressure dynamics. The measurements in two
volunteers during wakefulness suggest that the
velopharyngeal site is likely to collapse first over the
oropharyngeal site.
|
3689. |
59 |
Simulation of Nasal Air
Flow from High Resolution MRI Images of Patients with Empty
Nose Syndrome
Arthur Wunderlich1, Marc Scheithauer2,
Fabian Sommer2, and Wolfgang Freund1
1Diagnostic and Interventional Radiology,
Univ.-Clinic Ulm, Ulm, Germany, 2ENT
Dept., Univ.-Clinic Ulm, Ulm, Germany
To study the nasal air flow with finite volume methods,
we investigated ten patients with high-resolution MRI
during breathing of a) room air, b) menthol and c) after
inhalation of the decongestant xylometazoline. Nose
cavities were segmented from MRI data and flow was
simulated with mathematical methods. Results were
compared to those of a healthy control. Simulations show
the flow distribution in the nasal cavities and its
dependence on medication. In patients, flow is divided
nearly equal between both nasal cavities, in
contradiction to the physiological flow pattern observed
in controls where one nose cavity manages most of the
flow.
|
3690. |
60 |
DCE-MRI for Assessing
Antiangiogenic Drug Effect in a Mouse with Choroidal
Neovascularization
Jae-Hun Kim1, Ji Hoon Cha1, Geun
Ho Im2, Julius Chung3, and Jung
Hee Lee1
1Department of Radiology, Sungkyunkwan
University School of Medicine, Seoul, Korea, 2Center
for Molecular and Cellular Imaging, Samsung Biomedical
Research Institute, 3Samsung
Advanced Institute for Health Sciences & Technology,
Sungkyunkwan University
Dynamic contrast-enhanced magnetic resonance imaging
provides parameters indicating permeability of tumor
microvessels which has been shown to be closely related
to angiogenesis. In this study, we tested that DCE-MRI
can provide a non-invasive imaging biomarker to evaluate
anti-angiogenic efficacy of macular degeneration. Our
results demonstrated that there were significant changes
between permeability parameters computed from drug
treated and control group at 14 days (P < 0.01). These
findings show the feasibility of permeability parameter
as noninvasive biomarker for antiangiogenic drug
evaluation in a mouse with choroidal neovascularization
|
3691. |
61 |
Determination of
T1-Dependence on Oxygenation in the Eye Using a Simple
Phantom Model
Nicholas G Dowell1, Edward H Hughes2,
Andrew Simpson2, and Paul S Tofts1
1Brighton and Sussex Medical School,
Brighton, United Kingdom, 2Sussex
Eye Hospital, Brighton, United Kingdom
The relaxation parameter T1 has
a dependence on the partial pressure of O2 (pO2),
since T1 is
reduced by the presence of paramagnetic O2.
Here we discuss the construction of a pO2 phantom
that can be used to precisely determine this T1 dependence
on pO2, with the intention of performing
precise measures of oxygenation in the vitreous humour
(the clear gel between the lens and the retina) in the
eye. We present the relation between pO2 and
T1 for
balanced salt solution (BSS), which is used as a
replacement for the extracted vitreous humour following
a vitrectomy.
|
3692. |
62 |
Vitreous Oxygenation
Measured by T1 mapping
in the Eye Reveals No Increased Oxygenation Following
Vitrectomy
Nicholas G Dowell1, Edward H Hughes2,
Andrew Simpson2, and Paul S Tofts1
1Brighton and Sussex Medical School,
Brighton, United Kingdom, 2Sussex
Eye Hospital, Brighton, United Kingdom
We use a T1 mapping
technique to determine the partial pressure of oxygen
(pO2) of the vitreous humour (the clear gel
that fills the eyeball between the lens and the retina)
in a group of patients undergoing a vitrectomy (the
extraction of the vitreous). We measured pO2 in
9 patients before and after vitrectomy and showed that
there was no increase in vitreous oxygenation. This
finding could have implications for the understanding of
the therapeutic benefits of vitrectomy and may help
improve patient treatment. The technique itself provides
a non-invasive approach to pO2 measurement
that will permit longitudinal studies of the oxygenation
mechanism of the eye.
|
3693. |
63 |
Age-Related Changes of
Bone Marrow in the Mandible with Quantitative MRI
Kotaro Sekiya1,2, Osamu Sakai1,
Memi Watanabe1, Rohini N. Nadgir1,
Joseph H. Liao1, Shun Sakai1,
Takashi Kaneda3, and Hernan Jara1
1Boston Medical Center, Boston University
School of Medicine, Boston, MA, United States, 2Nihon
University Graduate School of Dentistry at Matsudo,
Matsudo, Chiba, Japan, 3Department
of Radiology, Nihon University School of Dentistry at
Matsudo, Matsudo, Chiba, Japan
Purpose: To investigate age-related changes of bone
marrow in the mandible using quantitative MRI. Methods:
36 subjects were imaged using the mixed-TSE sequence at
1.5T. The mandible was manually segmented, and further
divided into 5 regions. T1 and T2 relaxation time
histograms and volumes of the entire mandible and 5
sub-segments were analyzed. Results: T1 and T2
histograms demonstrated expected age-related yellow
marrow conversion. Conclusion: Expected progression of
marrow change in the mandible by visual estimates is
confirmed quantitatively; such quantitative analysis may
prove useful in detecting subtle marrow abnormalities
prior to becoming visually apparent.
|
3694. |
64 |
Comparative Study of a
Professional Tenor in a Tilting MR-Scanner - Does Supine
Position Change the Configuration of the Vocal Tract?
Michael Burdumy1,2, Louisa Traser2,
Marco Vicari1,3, Matthias Weigel1,
Bernhard Richter2, Jürgen Hennig1,
Maxim Zaitsev1, and Matthias Echternach2
1Department of Radiology, Medical Physics,
University Medical Center Freiburg, Freiburg, Germany, 2Department
of Musicians' Medicine, University Medical Center
Freiburg, Freiburg, Germany, 3Esaote
S.p.a., Genoa, Italy
Only recently MR Imaging has been used to investigate
movement patterns in the vocal tract during singing. In
our study we compare structures of the vocal tract of a
professional tenor while either in supine or prone
position using a tilting 0.25T MR-Scanner. The tenor was
instructed to sing an ascending scale in both supine and
prone position. Then, distances between anatomical
landmarks were measured in the acquired sagittal images.
Our results indicate only minor differences in these
distances in respect to posture.
|
3695. |
65 |
In vivo pre-operative
magnetisation transfer ratio for detection of thyroid
malignancy
Sidhartha Nagala1, Mary McLean2,
Piyush Jani1, and John Griffiths2
1Otolaryngology, Addenbrooke's Hospital,
Cambridge, United Kingdom, 2Cambridge
Research Institute, Cancer Research UK, Cambridge,
United Kingdom
A demand for new screening tests to discriminate between
different thyroid tumors exists. One ex vivo study
utilized magnetization transfer ratios to differentiate
between normal thyroid, benign and malignant thyroid
tumors. In this work, we present the results of the
first in vivo study in five normal volunteers and 25
patients with suspected thyroid tumors, prior to
surgery. The sensitivity and specificity to discriminate
between benign and malignant thyroid tumors using this
technique were comparable to the current gold standard,
ultrasound-guided needle biopsy. It has potential future
clinical use, and maybe valuable when combined with
other imaging techniques.
|
|
|
Electronic
Poster Session - Neuro B |
|
Clinical Diffusion & Microstructure
Click on
to view
the abstract pdf and click on
to view the
video presentation. (Not all presentations are available.)
Wednesday 9 May 2012
Exhibition Hall |
11:00 - 12:00 |
|
|
|
Computer # |
|
3696. |
49 |
VBM study of Diurnal
Variations of Brain Diffusion in Healthy Adults
Chunxiang Jiang1, Lijuan Zhang*1,
Xiaojing Long1, Weiqi Liao1, and
Wenhui Huang1
1Shenzhen Institutes of Advanced
Technology,Chinese Academy of Sciences, Shenzhen,
Guangdong, China
Diurnal alteration of diffusion parameters were observed
in grey and subgyral white matter of healthy human
brain. Peak ADC changes were found to locate in
bilateral occipital lingual and calcarine regions while
peak FA changes were located in the frontal lobes.
Changes in brain diffusion parameters may reflect the
underlying circadian physiological variations of human
brain.
|
3697. |
50 |
The Voxel-Based Comparison
of Fractional Anisotropy and Mean Diffusivity between the
Elderly and Young Using TBSS
Fan-Pei Gloria Yang1, Yao-Chia Shih2,3,
Ming-Chieh Mindy Fang1, Kayako Matsuo3,
Shen-Hsing Annabel Chen4, Toshiharu Nakai5,
and Wen-Yih Issac Tseng3,6
1Department of Foreign Languages and
Literature, National Tsing Hua University, Hsinchu,
Taiwan, 2Institute
of Biomedical Engineering, National Taiwan University,
Taipei, Taiwan, 3Center
for Optoelectronic Biomedicine, National Taiwan
University College of Medicine, Taipei, Taiwan, 4Division
of Psychology, School of Humanities and Social Sciences,
Nanyang Technological University, Singapore, Singapore, 5National
Center for Geriatrics and Gerontology, Aichi, Japan, 6Department
of Medical Imaging, National Taiwan University Hospital,
Taipei, Taiwan
Age related decreases in fractional anisotropy (FA) and
increases in mean diffusivity (MD) were observed across
the entire white matter (WM) skeleton as well as in
specific WM tracts. In this study, TBSS was applied to
FA and MD images to examine the differences in WM
integrity between healthy elderly and young
participants. The efficient registration by TBSS
successfully demonstrated the differences between
healthy young and elderly groups. FA and MD shared the
most significant difference in corona radiata. In
conclusion, the findings demonstrate the effectiveness
of TBSS as a population-wise measure of the WM change on
a voxel-by-voxel basis.
|
3698. |
51 |
High-resolution diffusion
tensor imaging of the hippocampus: a comparative study of
multi-shot vs. single-shot acquisitions
Ryo Sakamoto1, Tomohisa Okada1,
Koji Sakai2, Akira Yamamoto1,
Mitsunori Kanagaki1, Seiko Kasahara1,
Emiko Morimoto1, Takeshi Sawada1,
Thorsten Feiweier3, David Andrew Porter3,
and Kaori Togashi1
1Department of Diagnostic Imaging and Nuclear
Medicine, Kyoto University Graduate School of Medicine,
Kyoto, Japan, 2Department
of Human Health Science, Kyoto University Graduate
School of Medicine, Kyoto, Japan, 3Siemens
AG, Erlangen, Germany
High-resolution DTI with reasonable reproducibility in
acceptable scan time for the hippocampus and structures
at its vicinity are highly important for detection of
faint pathological changes of neurological disorders.
Both of two latest high-resolution DTI sequences,
single-shot Advanced (Adv)-DTI using a single refocusing
RF with distortion correction and multi-shot readout
segmented (RS)-DTI, showed high reproducibility of ADC.
RS-DTI had less distortion and was considered more
accurate for population-based analysis. For FA, Adv-DTI
was superior, probably due to higher SNR. In either
case, CSF had much higher variance and it had better be
excluded from further analysis such as voxel-based
morphometry.
|
3699. |
52 |
In-vivo Detection of
Intracortical Myelinated Fibers in Human Hippocampal
Formation: Submillimeter Resolution Diffusion Tensor Imaging
Compared with Histological Findings
Takashi Yoshiura1, Akio Hiwatashi1,
Satoshi Suzuki2, Tsuyoshi Okamoto3,
Osamu Togao1, Koji Yamashita1,
Kazufumi Kikuchi1, and Hiroshi Honda1
1Department of Clinical Radiology, Kyushu
University, Fukuoka, Japan, 2Department
of Neuropathology, Kyushu University, Fukuoka, Japan, 3Department
of Advanced Medical Initiatives, Kyusuh University,
Fukuoka, Japan
Intracortical myelinated fiber (ICMF) is an essential
component to characterize microarchitecture of the
cerebral cortex. Our purpose was to test the feasibility
of in-vivo detection of ICMF in the human hippocampal
formation by high-resolution diffusion tensor (DT)
imaging. DT images of the hippocampal formation were
obtained with an in-plane resolution of 0.85 mm.
Fractional anisotropy (FA) in 3 different cortical
subregions were compared. FA in subiculum was
significantly higher than those in the other regions,
which was in accordance with histological findings in
myelin-stained specimens. Results suggested that in-vivo
detection of ICMF using high resolution DT imaging is
feasible.
|
3700. |
53 |
The application of
multiple b-value DWI with a stretched-exponential model in
preoperative grading of cerebral gliomas
Wen-zhen Zhu1, and He Wang2
1Department of Radiology, Tongji Hospital,
Tongji Medical College, Huazhong University of Science
and Technology, Wuhan, Hubei Province, China, 2Applied
Science Lab, GE Healthcare
The diffusion attenuation of brain water does not follow
monoexponential decay and will deviate from straightness
when b-factor exceed 1000 s/mm². The purpose of this
study was to evaluate the application value of multiple
b-value DWI with stretched- exponential model in grading
of astrocytomas.The results demonsttrated that the
quantitative parameters (DCC and ) of stretched
exponential model multi-b DWI provides a more accurate
estimate in the preoperative grading of gliomas than ADC
of the standard mono-exponential model DWI, which can be
new imaging markers to differentiate the grade of
gliomas and evaluate the effectiveness of therapy.
|
3701. |
54 |
On using structural
network patterns for prediction of genetic risks in
Schizophrenia
Madhura A Ingalhalikar1, Luke Bloy1,
Drew Parker1, Raquel Gur2, Ruben
Gur2, and Ragini Verma1
1Section of Biomedical Image Analysis,
University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania,
United States, 2Brain
Behavior Laboratory, University of Pennsylvania,
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States
This study investigates the presence of endophenotypic
brain patterns in the family members of patients with
schizophrenia via a structural network analysis. High
dimensional gender specific classifiers based on local
and global network properties were constructed for
patients diagnosed with schizophrenia or schizoaffective
disorder and healthy controls. The classifier associated
a distributed network connectivity score (DNCS) with
each of the asymptomatic family member. Forty percent of
the FM’s were classified closer to patients.
Furthermore, females displayed enhanced genetic
susceptibility based on the specificity of the
classifier and the DNCS scores of the family members.
|
3702. |
55 |
Principal Diffusion
Direction in Relation to the Geometry of the Cortical
Surface in Multiple Sclerosis
Elisabetta Pagani1, Maria A. Rocca1,
Paolo Preziosa1, Sarlota Mesaros2,
Bruno Colombo3, Mark A. Horsfield4,
Andrea Falini5, Giancarlo Comi3,
and Massimo Filippi1
1Neuroimaging Research Unit, Institute of
Experimental Neurology, San Raffaele Scientific
Institute and Vita-Salute San Raffaele University,
Milan, Italy, Italy, 2Clinic
of Neurology, Faculty of Medicine, University of
Belgrade, Belgrade, Yugoslavia, 3Department
of Neurology, San Raffaele Scientific Institute and
Vita-Salute San Raffaele University, Milan, Italy,
Italy, 4Department
of Cardiovascular Sciences, University of Leicester,
Leicester, United Kingdom,5Department of
Neuroradiology, San Raffaele Scientific Institute and
Vita-Salute San Raffaele University, Milan, Italy, Italy
In 113 multiple sclerosis (MS) patients and 35 healthy
subjects, we calculated the angle between the principal
diffusion direction and the cortical surface within each
voxel of the brain cortex. It has previously been
suggested that, in normal mature GM no preferential
direction for diffusion exists, because of the cellular
structures components that run both parallel (dendrites)
and perpendicular (neurons and neuritis) to the cortex.
MS patients (particularly those with the progressive
disease clinical phenotypes) had an increased number of
GM voxels with an angle close to 90 degrees, suggesting
a degeneration of the structures running perpendicular
to the cortical surface.
|
3703. |
56 |
Microstructural
Abnormalities in the Corpus Callosum of Patients with
Pelizaeus-Merzbacher Disease with Different PLP1 Mutations.
Malek I Makki1, Jeremy Laukka2,3,
and James Garbern4
1MRI Research, University Children Hospital
Zurich, Zurich, Switzerland, 2Radiology
and Neurology, Michigan State University, East Lansing,
Mi, United States, 3Neurology,
Wayne State University, Detroit, Mi, United States, 4Molecular
Medicine and Genetics, Wayne State University, Detroit,
Mi, United States
DTI was performed on twelve patients with
Pelizaeus-Merzbacher disease. These had different PLP1
mutation categories: null, moderate, and severe.
Patients with moderate mutation exhibited the lowest
radial diffusion and ADC and the highest FA in the
splenium. This suggested hypomyelination and axonopathy.
We also observed significant differences in radial
diffusion and anisotropy between moderate and null
mutations in the splenium showing that these patients
have mild reduction in myelin with generally preserved
axons.
|
3704. |
57 |
A comparison of HARDI and
restricted diffusion q-space imaging for assessment of
auditory nerve integrity
David K. Wright1,2, David B. Grayden3,
Jhodie R. Duncan1, and Leigh A. Johnston1,3
1Florey Neuroscience Institutes, Parkville,
Victoria, Australia, 2Centre
for Neuroscience, University of Melbourne, Melbourne,
Victoria, Australia,3NeuroEngineering
Laboratory, Electrical and Electronic Engineering,
University of Melbourne
Cochlear implants have been remarkably successful in
providing hearing to the profoundly deaf, however there
is great variability in the benefit that individual
cochlear implant users experience. It is accepted that
the condition of the auditory nerve correlates with
implant success. To date, diffusion imaging studies have
focused on higher auditory pathways rather than
assessing the auditory nerve itself. As such, we assess
high angular resolution diffusion imaging and q-space
approaches in ex vivo rat cochlea, with the aim of
developing a clinical tool to predict the viability of
cochlea implantation prior to surgery.
|
3705. |
58 |
Unilateral Sensorineural
Hearing Loss in Children is Predicted by Reduced Mean
Diffusivity in the Sublenticular Region of the Left Internal
Capsule
Vincent J Schmithorst1, Scott K Holland2,
and Robert W Keith3
1Radiology, Children's Hospital of Pittsburgh
of UPMC, Pittsburgh, PA, United States, 2Children's
Hospital, Pediatric Neuroimaging Research Consortium,
Cincinnati, OH, United States, 3Audiology,
University of Cincinnati, Cincinnati, OH, United States
Diffusion tensor imaging (DTI) and multi-voxel pattern
analysis (MVPA) were performed on normal-hearing
children and children with unilateral sensorineural
hearing loss (USNHL). USNHL was predicted by reduced
mean diffusivity (MD) in the sublenticular part of the
left internal capsule, and the reduced MD was the result
of decreased radial diffusivity (RD). Our results likely
indicate activity-dependent changes in myelination in
children with USNHL in the final part of the auditory
pathway in the left hemisphere. The decreased MD did not
correlate with higher-order auditory performance,
indicating a likely cortical etiology for these deficits
in children with USNHL.
|
3706. |
59 |
Alterations of the
inferior longitudinal fasciculus in congenital and late
blindness
Nina L. Reislev1,2, Maurice Ptito1,3,
Ron Kupers2, Hartwig R. Siebner1,2,
and Tim B. Dyrby1
1Danish Research Center for Magnetic
Resonance, section 340, Copenhagen University Hospital
Hvidovre, Hvidovre, Denmark, 2Department
for Neuroscience and Pharmacology, Faculty of Health
Sciences, Copenhagen University, Copenhagen, Denmark, 3Université
de Montréal, School of Optometry, Montréal, Québec,
Canada
This study examines the effect of the functional
reorganization in the visually deprived human brain on
the underlying white matter microstructure. White matter
changes were examined in the inferior longitudinal
fasciculus (ILF) that belongs to the ventral visual
pathway. Diffusion weighted MRI was acquired in 6
congenitally blind, 6 late blind, and 6 matched sighted
controls. Left and right ILF were extracted from
deterministic tractography. Diffusion parameters related
to microstructural properties were determined. We found
that compared to control subjects, congenitally blind
and late blind subjects had significantly lower
fractional anisotropy of ILF.
|
3707. |
60 |
VEGF enhance the
permeability of the blood-brain barrier
Shize Jiang1, Rui Xia1, Lei Wang1,
and Fabao Gao1
1Department of Radiology, Molecular Imaging
Center, West China Hospital, Sichuan University,
Chengdu, Sichuan, China
The blood-brain barrier (BBB) is one of the most
important interfaces that keep the homeostasis of brain.
However, it also prevents drugs from entering in morbid
state. VEGF is an important growth factor that promotes
neovascularization. We think it might be helpful to
increase the permeability of the BBB. To test this
hypothesis, we used KM mice with the venous injection of
Hu-VEGF165 and detect the permeability of the BBB both
in MRI and histological methods. We find that VEGF can
increase the permeability of the BBB and may be a new
direction for the CNS drugs delivery.
|
3708. |
61 |
Brain core temperature of
mild head trauma patients as assessed by DWI
Jun Tazoe1, Kei Yamada1, Koji
Sakai2, and Kentaro Akazawa1
1Radiology, Graduate School of Medical
Science, Kyoto Prefectural University of Medicine,
Kyoto, Kyoto, Japan, 2Human
Health Science, Graduate School of Medicine, Kyoto
University, Kyoto, Kyoto, Japan
Brain temperature is known to increase in severe head
trauma patients. In mild head trauma cases, however,
temperature measurement is not possible and the
alteration in brain temperature has not been assessed.
We tried assessing their cerebral ventricular
temperature by DWI. 20 patients of within-30-day from
mild head trauma were compared with the normal controls
(14 subjects). 4 patients at the over-30-day period were
compared to other groups. In our study, the temperature
difference was found statistically significant when
within-30-day and normal controls were compared. This
decrease in temperature was considered to be the
reflection of decline in metabolism.
|
3709. |
62 |
Posttraumatic white matter
diffusivity changes in postmortem brain
Nikolaus Krebs1,2, Christian Langkammer3,
Stefan Ropele3, Franz Fazekas3,
Walter Goessler4, Kathrin Yen5,
and Eva Scheurer1,2
1Ludwig Boltzmann Institute for
Clinical-Forensic Imaging, Graz, Austria, 2Medical
University, Graz, Austria, 3Department
of Neurology, Medical University, Graz, Austria, 4Institute
of Chemistry - Analytical Chemistry, Karl-Franzens
University, Graz, Austria, 5Institute
of Legal Medicine and Traffic Medicine, University
Hospital, Heidelberg, Germany
Diffuse axonal injury can be observed following
traumatic brain injury (TBI) and might be associated
with diffusivity changes. Therefore, fractional
anisotropy and mean diffusivity values were investigated
using in situ diffusion tensor imaging in corpses having
died of TBI and an uninjured age and temperature matched
control group. Additionally, wet-to-dry mass ratios of
the same regions were determined to estimate influence
of posttraumatic edema. Decreased fractional anisotropy
and significantly increased mean diffusivity values were
observed in posttraumatic white matter regions. In
combination with indifferent wet-to-dry mass ratios
these results might suggest a direct influence of
traumatic injury on postmortem diffusivity.
|
3710. |
63 |
Pathophysiological changes
in contusions post traumatic brain injury: insights from
diffusion tensor imaging
Virginia Newcombe1,2, Guy Williams2,
Joanne Outtrim1, Doris Chatfield1,
Giulia Abate1, Thomas Geeraerts1,
Anne Manktelow1, Hywel Room1,
Leela Mariappen1, Peter Hutchinson3,
Jonathan Coles1, and David Menon1,2
1Division of Anaesthesia, Cambridge
University, Cambridge, Cambridgeshire, United Kingdom, 2Wolfson
Brain Imaging Centre, Cambridge University, Cambridge,
Cambridgeshire, United Kingdom, 3Academic
Department of Neurosurgery, Cambridge University,
Cambridge, Cambridgeshire, United Kingdom
Traumatic brain injury (TBI) is often exacerbated by
secondary events that lead to secondary brain injury,
and represent potentially modifiable cause of mortality
and morbidity post TBI. One potential means of improving
such translation is to characterise tissue at risk using
early imaging studies, and define markers of injury
progression in these tissue compartments to use as
biomarkers. This study used diffusion tensor imaging to
characterise contusions and their growth during the
acute phase of injury. Distinct regions were observed
including a low diffusivity rim that may represent an
area of at risk tissue (a “traumatic penumbra”)
following TBI which may be a potential target for
therapy.
|
3711. |
64 |
Detecting Mild Traumatic
Brain Injury at the Acute Stage: a Diffusion Tensor Imaging
Investigation and Neurocognitive assessment
Zhifeng Kou1, Ramtilak Gattu2,
Randall Benson3, Hardik Doshi4,
Jie Yang5, Valerie Mika4, Grace Ma6,
Robert Welch7, John Woodard8,
Scott Millis9, and E Mark Haacke1
1Biomedical Engineering and Radiology, Wayne
State University School of Medicine, Detroit, MI, United
States, 2Radiology,
Wayne State University School of Medicine, Detroit, MI,
United States, 3Neurology
and Radiology, Wayne State University School of
Medicine, Detroit, MI, 4Biomedical
Engineering, Wayne State University, Detroit, MI, United
States, 5Radiology,
Wayne State University, Detroit, MI, United States, 6Wayne
State University School of Medicine, Detroit, MI, United
States, 7Emergency
Medicine, Wayne State University School of Medicine,
Detroit, MI, United States, 8Psychology,
Wayne State University, Detroit, MI, United States, 9Physical
Medicine and Rehabilitation, Wayne State University,
Detroit, MI, United States
There is limited data reported the neurocognitive status
and their injury pattern of mild traumatic brain injury
at the acute stage. Our data demonstrated significant
neurocognitive deficits and DTI white matter lesions in
mild traumatic brain injury patients at the acute stage.
|
3712. |
65 |
Microscopic damage to the
left hemisphere contributes in determining neglect in
patients with a right focal lesion
Chiara Mastropasqua1,2, Marco Bozzali1,
Mara Cercignani1,3, Barbara Basile1,
Sonia Bonnì4, and Giacomo Koch4,5
1Neuroimaging laboratory, Santa Lucia
Foundation IRCCS, Rome, Italy, 2Neuroscience,
Trieste University, Trieste, Italy, 3Brighton
& Sussex Medical School,Clinical Imaging Sciences
Centre, University of Sussex, Brighton, United Kingdom, 4Laboratory
of Clinical and Behavioural Neurology, Santa Lucia
Foundation IRCCS, Rome, Italy, 5Stroke
Unit, Department of Neuroscience, University of Rome Tor
Vergata, Rome, Italy
Using tract-based spatial statistics (TBSS), we
investigated the contribution of left hemisphere (LH)
microstructural white matter (WM) changes in accounting
for the presence and severity of hemispatial neglect in
patients suffering from right-side stroke. TBSS analysis
revealed a diffuse reduction of FA in most WM tracts of
the LH, and a an association between neuropsychological
measures of neglect severity and FA values in the region
of the CC connecting the two parietal cortices. This
study supports, on a microstructural basis, the theory
that hemispatial neglect originates, by disconnection
mechanism, from an unbalance of interhemispheric
interaction between the two parietal cortices.
|
3713. |
66 |
Neurostructural integrity
is damaged by HCV mono-infection and HIV/HCV Co-infection: A
Diffusion Tensor Imaging Study
Manoj Kumar Sarma1, Rajakumar Nagarajan1,
April Thames2, Vanessa Streiff 3,
Tim Arentsen3, Stella Panos4,
Jason Smith3, Charles H Hinkin2,3,
and M. Albert Thomas1
1Radiological Sciences, UCLA School of
Medicine, Los Angeles, CA, United States, 2Psychiatry,
UCLA School of Medicine, Los Angeles, CA, United States, 3VA
Greater Los Angeles Healthcare Service, Los Angeles, CA,
United States, 4UCLA
School of Medicine, Los Angeles, CA, United States
The synergistic effects of human immunodeficiency virus
(HIV) co-infection on Hepatitis C virus (HCV) remains
poorly understood with only a few studies on
neuropsychological sequelae. Here, using diffusion
tensor imaging and employing an automated atlas based
analysis, we examined the neurostructural effects of HCV
mono-infection and HIV/HCV co-infection through two
markers, mean diffusivity (MD) and fractional anisotropy
(FA). We investigated sixteen HCV mono-infected, eleven
HIV/HCV co-infected, and fifteen healthy controls. We
found widespread brain regions with elevation of MD and
increase/decrease of FA values in both HCV/HIV
co-infected and HCV mono-infected adults relative to
healthy controls. The decrease in white matter (WM)
integrity is best seen in increases in MD. Indications
of WM axonal integrity present a more complicated
picture, with both increased and decreased FA.
|
3714. |
67 |
Fractional Anisotropy
Differences in Basal Ganglia in Neurological and
Neurodegenerative disorders
Gonzalo Pajares1, Juan Antonio
Hernández-Tamames2, Pablo García-Polo3,
Norberto Malpica2, Ana Ramos4, and
Juan Álvarez-Linera5
1Fundación CIEN - Fundación Reina Sofía,
Madrid, Madrid, Spain, 2Universidad
Rey Juan Carlos, Spain, 3Centro
de Tecnología Biomédica, Spain, 4Hospital
Universitario 12 de Octubre, Spain, 5Hospital
Ruber Internacional, Spain
The aim of the present work is to study differences in
the basal ganglia in several diseases, using Diffusion
Tensor Imaging. Although no differences in gray matter
are expected when using this technique, an increase in
Fractional Anisotropy values has been observed in
patients with respect to controls. Depending on the
pathology, this increase affecs different structures:
substantia nigra in PD; pallidus, putamen and substantia
nigra in PSP, or pallidus, putamen and frontal cortex in
m-MCI and AD. These results seem to related to the
accumulation of iron in the brain.
|
3715. |
68 |
Diffusion tensor imaging
analysis with tract-based spatial statistics of the white
matter abnormalities in early-treated phenylketonuria
Huiling Peng1, Amanda J. Moffitt1,
Dawn Peck1, Desirée A. White2, and
Shawn E. Christ1
1University of Missouri, Columbia, Missouri,
United States, 2Washington
University, St. Louis, Missouri, United States
Phenylketonuria (PKU) is a genetic condition
characterized by an impaired ability to metabolize the
amino acid phenylalanine into tyrosine, a precursor of
dopamine and other neurotransmitters. The aim of this
study was to investigate white matter fiber changes in
individuals with early-treated PKU (ETPKU) by means of
tract-based spatial statistics (TBSS) approach.
Significant reductions of axial, radial, and mean
diffusivity were detected in numerous white matter
tracts of patients with ETPKU compared to normal
controls. A negative correlation between age and mean
value of all diffusivity of the whole brain white matter
skeleton was also found within the ETPKU group.
|
3716. |
69 |
Selective white matter
connectivity loss (LoCo) identified in the brain-reward
system of alcohol dependent individuals
Amy Kuceyeski1, Dieter Meyerhoff2,3,
Timothy Durazzo2,3, and Ashish Raj1
1Radiology, Weill Cornell Medical College,
New York, NY, United States, 2Radiology
and Biomedical Engineering, University of California San
Francisco, San Francisco, CA, United States, 3Center
for Imaging of Neurodegenerative Diseases, San Francisco
Veterans Administration Medical Center, San Francisco,
CA, United States
In this study, we implement a recently developed measure
called the Comparative Connectivity Loss (CCL) that
gives the amount of white matter connectivity disruption
for a particular gray matter region, and apply it to a
group of alcohol-dependent cohorts. We show that the
Brain Reward System is preferentially disrupted, without
leading to more widespread and global network changes.
We also show that the CCL is a more sensitive and
specific metric than gray matter atrophy when
differentiating between alcohol dependent individuals
and non/light drinking controls.
|
3717. |
70 |
Abnormal anterior corpus
callosum white matter integrity in heavy smokers revealed by
tract-based spatial statistics
Fuchun Lin1, Guangyao Wu2, Shiqi
Yang2, Haopeng Peng2, Prasanna
Ghimire2, Ling Zhu2, Guobing Liu2,
and Hao Lei1
1State Key Laboratory of Magnetic Resonance
and Atomic and Molecular Physics, Wuhan Institute of
Physics and Mathematics, Chinese Academy of Sciences,
Wuhan, China, 2Department
of Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Zhongnan Hospital, Wuhan
University, Wuhan, China
Tract-based spatial statistics was used to investigate
white matter integrity in heavy smokers. Compared to
healthy non-smokers, smokers show abnormalities in the
left anterior corpus callosum connecting the bilateral
orbifrontal and prefrontal cortices. The decreased FA in
this region was reflected by decreased axial diffusivity
and increased radial diffusivity, which is probably
caused by axonal loss and disrupted integrity of myelin.
Moreover, in smokers, radial diffusivity in the left
anterior corpus callosum was positively correlated with
the duration of smoking. Our findings suggested that
longer exposure to cigarette smoking is associated with
decreased microstructural integrity of the left anterior
corpus callosum in smokers.
|
3718. |
71 |
DIFFUSION TENSOR IMAGING
ANALYSIS OF OPTIC RADIATION BY READOUT-SEGMENTED ECHO-PLANAR
IMAGING
Yamada Hirofumi1, Yamamoto Akira1,
Okada Tomohisa1, Kanagaki Mitsunori1,
Kasahara Seiko1, Sawada Takeshi1,
Morimoto Emiko1, Sakamoto Ryo1,
Okuchi Sachi1, and Togashi Kaori1
1Department of Diagnostic Imaging and Nuclear
Medicine, Kyoto University, Kyoto, Kyoto, Japan
We investigated diffusion tensor imaging (DTI)
parameters of the optic radiation by region of interest
(ROI) analysis of readout segmented DTI (RS-DTI) with
healthy volunteers. In ROI analysis we observed
significant differences of radial diffusivity (RD),
fractional anisotropy (FA) and apparent diffusion
coefficient (ADC) between the external sagittal stratum
and the internal sagittal stratum. We suppose these
differences may reflect the disparities of myelination
rather than that of axonal density.
|
3719. |
72 |
DTI assessment of
sensory-motor pathways in children with cerebral palsy
Anastasiya Batrachenko1,2, Arnaud Guidon1,3,
Jessica Sun4, Mohamad Mikati5,
Joanne Kurtzberg6,7, and Allen W Song1,8
1Brain Imaging and Analysis Center, Duke
University, Durham, North Carolina, United States, 2Medical
Physics, Duke University, Durham, North Carolina, United
States, 3Biomedical
Engineering, Duke University, Durham, North Carolina,
United States, 4Pediatrics,
Pediatric Oncology, Duke University, Durham, NC, United
States, 5Pediatric
Neurology, Duke University, Durham, North Carolina,
United States, 6Pediatrics,
Pediatrics Blood & Marrow Transplantation, Duke
University, Durham, NC, United States, 7Pathology,
Duke University, Durham, NC, United States, 8Radiology,
Duke University, Durham, North Carolina, United States
In this study, we correlate diffusion connectivity
metrics of the corticospinal tract with clinical
behavioral scores in children with cerebral palsy
undergoing autologous cord blood stem cell treatment. In
diplegic and quadriplegic patients, total tract volumes
were shown to have a significant inverse linear
correlation with the disease severity scores. In
hemiplegic patients, the fraction of the affected tract
volume generally tends to decrease with greater disease
severity, but also suggests cases of possible functional
compensation by the unaffected tract. Standardized
quantitative DTI will furthermore help characterize
causes and effects of cerebral palsy manifestations and
the treatment response mechanisms.
|
|
|
Electronic
Poster Session - Neuro B |
|
Clinical Diffusion & Tractography
Click on
to view
the abstract pdf and click on
to view the
video presentation. (Not all presentations are available.)
Wednesday 9 May 2012
Exhibition Hall |
10:00 - 11:00 |
|
|
|
Computer # |
|
3720. |
73 |
STRUCTURAL CONNECTIVITY
ANALYSIS OF THE PEDUNCULOPONTINE NUCLEUS REGION IN
PARKINSONIAN SYNDROMS
Clarisse Longo dos Santos1,2, Oliver Riff1,
Claire Ewenczyk3,4, Jerôme Yelnik3,5,
Cecile Gaudebout3,4, Eric Bardinet2,6,
Linda Marrakchi-Kacem1,3, Sara Fernandez
Vidal3,6, Chantal Francois3,5,
Marie-Laure Welter3,4, Bertrand Gaymard3,4,
Cecile Gallea2,3, Salma Mesmoudi5,
Sophie Lecomte1, Habib Benali5,
Stephane Lehericy2,3, Marie Vidailhet3,4,
and Cyril Poupon1
1Neurospin, CEA/I2BM, Gif-sur-Yvette, France, 2CR-ICM
/ CENIR, Paris, France, 3CR-ICM
/ AP-HP, Groupe Hospitalier Pitié-Salpêtrière, Faculté
de Médecine, Paris, 4Centre
d’Investigation Clinique, Fédération des Maladies du
Système Nerveux, France, 5INSERM, 6CNRS-UMR7225,
France
We have combined structural and diffusion magnetic
resonance imaging to investigate the connectivity of the
pedunculopontine nucleus (PPN) region in Parkinson's
disease and Progressive supranuclear palsy patients. A
total of 87 participants were recruited, including 45
patients PD, 12 patients PSP and 30 age-matched
controls. Images were acquired using a 3T (Trio Siemens;
T1; T2; diffusion 60 directions b-value 1500s/mm²) and a
7T (Trio Siemens; T2* 0.6x0.6x0.6mm3). Data analysis was
performed using BrainVISA/Connectomist-2.0 and
FreeSurfer tools. Preliminary results suggest that the
method used here can effectively show the topographical
representation of the connections between PPN and the
motor cortex.
|
3721. |
74 |
Can structural
connectivity studies be performed in children with servere
ataxias?
Stephen Rose1, Kerstin Pannek2,
Kate Sinclair3, and Martin Lavin4
1University of Queensland, Brisbane,
Queensland, Australia, 2University
of Queensland, 3Royal
Childrens Hospital, 4Queensland
Institue for Medical Research
Structural connectivity studies employing
diffusion-weighted MRI (dMRI) and probabilistic
tractography can provide new insight into the loss in
integrity of important white matter (WM) motor pathways.
However, such imaging studies in children with severe
ataxias present a significant challenge, due to the
likelihood of artifacts induced by involuntary head
movement. To overcome this constraint, we have developed
an image processing strategy to reduce such effects and
present novel information about the degeneration of
specific cerebellar-corticomotor pathways in children
with ataxia-telangiectasia (A-T). Such information
improves our understanding of the clinical phenotype in
A-T.
|
3722. |
75 |
Impact of Fiber Tracking
on Neurosurgery Using an Intra-operative 3.0T MR System
Sanju Lama1, Boguslaw Tomanek2,
and Garnette R Sutherland1
1Clinical Neurosciences, University of
Calgary, Calgary, Alberta, Canada, 2Clinical
Neurosciences, Experimental Imaging Center, University
of Calgary, Calgary, Alberta, Canada
Intra-operative MR imaging (iMRI) and fiber tracking
using Diffusion Tensor Imaging (DTI) provides 3D
knowledge of white matter tracts anatomy and their
relationship to neurosurgical pathology
intra-operatively. Image quality and definition is
dependent on magnetic and gradient field strengths. A
single center prospective study including 177 patients
using 3.0T iMRI system, showed that intra-operative DTI
tractography can be a valuable adjunct to neurosurgery
affecting neurosurgical planning in up to 16% of cases.
Furthermore such a discipline provided an excellent
educational forum for the discussion of white matter
anatomy in relation to the target lesion amongst
residents and staff neurosurgeons.
|
3723. |
76 |
The impact of extreme
prematurity on motor tract development in adolescence
Linda Chan1, Deanne K Thompson1,
Peter J Anderson1, Alan Connelly2,
Jeanie Cheong1, and Lex W Doyle1
1Murdoch Childrens Research Institute, Royal
Children's Hospital, University of Melbourne, Melbourne,
Victoria, Australia, 23Brain
Research Institute, Florey Neuroscience Institutes,
Melbourne, Victoria, Australia
Extremely preterm birth or extremely low birth weight
are associated with brain white matter abnormalities and
motor impairments. Structural and diffusion MRIs were
obtained in 186 extremely preterm and 136 full-term
adolescents at 18 years of age. Constrained spherical
deconvolution tractography was performed. Extremely
preterm infants had altered microstructural organization
in the superior corticospinal tract regions, which
related to neonatal brain injury. Motor impairment was
related to reduced tract volume. Thus, preterm
adolescents may have delayed corticospinal tract
development. This may be a consequence of neonatal brain
injury, and may relate to impaired motor outcomes in
extreme prematurity.
|
3724. |
77 |
Delayed, progressive white
matter loss following traumatic brain injury, demonstrated
using probabilistic tractography
Virginia Newcombe1, Linus Schumacher2,
Guy Williams3, Jo Outtrim1, Anne
Manktelow1, Jonathan Coles1, Peter
Hutchinson4, Marta Correia2, and
David Menon1
1Division of Anaesthesia, Cambridge
University, Cambridge, Cambridgeshire, United Kingdom, 2MRC
Cognition and Brain Sciences Unit, Cambridge University, 3Wolfson
Brain Imaging Centre, Cambridge University, 4Academic
Department of Neurosurgery, Cambridge University
Traumatic brain injury (TBI) is a major cause of
morbidity and mortality worldwide. It is clear that many
of the sequelae are not just direct consequences of the
acute but event represent dynamic processes with changes
occurring many years after the precipitating injury. In
this study, the temporal course of white matter injury
from acute to chronic phases after injury was quantified
using probabilistic tractography. Such knowledge of
longitudinal change is important to aid interpretation
of imaging findings, to provide further insight into
pathophysiology, and help to provide a framework that
allows DTI to be used as an imaging biomarker of therapy
response.
|
3725. |
78 |
DTI tractography reveals
changes in the optic radiation of patients with persistent
visual failure following surgery for tumours causing optic
chiasm compression
Andrew D Nichols1,2, Bradford A Moffat3,4,
Helen V Danesh-Meyer5, and Andrew H Kaye1,2
1Department of Surgery (RMH/WH), University
of Melbourne, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia, 2Department
of Neurosurgery, Royal Melbourne Hospital, Melbourne,
Victoria, Australia, 3Department
of Radiology, University of Melbourne, Melbourne,
Victoria, Australia, 4Department
of Radiology, Royal Melbourne Hospital, Melbourne,
Victoria, Australia, 5Department
of Ophthalmology, University of Auckland, Auckland, New
Zealand
Brain tumours can cause optic chiasm compression and
lead to visual deficits. This is the first study to use
diffusion tensor imaging tractography of the optic
radiation to investigate the downstream effects of brain
tumours in these patients. In this study, patients with
persistent visual deficits lasting over one year post
surgery show decreased fractional anisotropy, increased
radial diffusivity and decreased optic radiation size
compared to patients with normal vision. Additional
diffusion tensor imaging tractography studies of the
visual pathway in these patients will continue to
investigate the relationship between tumours causing
optic chiasm compression and visual deficits.
|
3726. |
79 |
Altered functional
significance of structural connectivity for language
processing in autism spectrum disorders
Yu-Chun Lo1, Susan Shur-Fen Gau2,
and Wen-Yih Isaac Tseng1,3
1Center for Optoelectronic Biomedicine,
National Taiwan University College of Medicine, Taipei,
Taiwan, 2Department
of Psychiatry, National Taiwan University Hospital and
College of Medicine, Taipei, Taiwan, 3Department
of Medical Imaging, National Taiwan University Hospital,
Taipei, Taiwan
This study investigated structural connectivity of the
dorsal and ventral pathways of the language network
using diffusion spectrum imaging tractogrpahy, and its
functional significance corresponding to verbal IQ (VIQ)
and verbal comprehension index (VCI). The results showed
that structural connectivity of the left dorsal pathway
in neurotypicals was associated with VIQ (r = 0.493,
p=.0027), whereas structural connectivity of the left
ventral pathway was associated with VCI (r = 0.447,
p=.0048). These findings suggest that the functional
significance of structural connectivity for language
processing is altered in ASD.
|
3727. |
80 |
Diffusion Spectrum Imaging
Tractography Study of Ventral and Dorsal Pathways for
Language in Schizophrenia
Chen-Hao Wu1, Hai-Go Hwu2, Chih-Ming
Liu2, Chen-Chung Liu2, Chung-Ming
Chen1, and Wen-Yih Isaac Tseng3,4
1Institute of Biomedical Engineering,
National Taiwan University, Taipei, Taiwan, 2Department
of Psychiatry, National Taiwan University Hospital,
Taipei, Taiwan, 3Center
for Optoelectronic Biomedicine, National Taiwan
University College of Medicine, Taipei, Taiwan, 4Department
of Medical Imaging, National Taiwan University Hospital,
Taipei, Taiwan
Diffusion Spectrum Imaging Tractography Study of Ventral
and Dorsal Pathways for Language in Schizophrenia
Schizophrenia is a mental disorder that goes along with
progressively feeble symptoms. The clinical
manifestations include auditory hallucinations, paranoid
or bizarre delusions, or disorganized speech and
thinking with significant social or occupational
dysfunction. Abnormalities within language-related brain
structures have been associated with clinical symptoms
in schizophrenia. Recent functional and anatomical
studies suggest that two distinct white matter tracts,
called ventral and dorsal pathways provide communication
between the two regions that are crucial to language
processing. In this study, we used diffusion spectrum
imaging tractography to reconstruct the connections
involved in the ventral and dorsal pathways for language
and to study the alteration of its structural
connectivity in schizophrenia.
|
3728. |
81 |
An objective tractography
method using a diffusion spectrum imaging (DSI) template
Yu-Chun Lo1, Yung-Chin Hsu2,
Hsiao-Lan Sharon Wang1, and Wen-Yih Isaac
Tseng1,3
1Center for Optoelectronic Biomedicine,
National Taiwan University College of Medicine, Taipei,
Taiwan, 2Department
of Biomedical Engineering and Environmental Sciences,
National Tsing Hua University, Taiwan, 3Department
of Medical Imaging, National Taiwan University Hospital,
Taipei, Taiwan
Diffusion tractography has raised interests in the
neuroscience community for in vivo tracking of white
matter fiber pathways. This technique, however, requires
substantial maneuver and thus very subjective and less
reproducible. In this study we proposed a standard
procedure of tractography that could minimize the human
intervention. This procedure entailed a diffusion
spectrum imaging (DSI) template on which interested
fiber pathways and their ROIs were determined once for
all. The proposed method may improve the reproducibility
and efficiency of tractography-based analysis that
involves multiple pathways in a large number of
subjects.
|
3729. |
82 |
The LoCo (Loss in
Connectivity) tool: a new way to investigate changes to the
structural brain network in various types of disease or
injury
Amy Kuceyeski1, Norman Relkin2,3,
and Ashish Raj1
1Radiology, Weill Cornell Medical College,
New York, New York, United States, 2Neurology
and Neuroscience, Weill Cornell Medical College, New
York, New York, United States, 3NewYork-Presbyterian
Hospital, New York, NY, United States
There are many tools to assess pathologic brain changes
with MRI, but, to our knowledge, the LoCo (Loss in
Connection) Tool presented here is the first that
associates localized white matter (WM) lesions with
disruptions in gray matter connectivity as a step toward
understanding the lesions’ functional implications. This
tool uses tractograms (set of WM fibers) from a large
set of normal healthy individuals in a common space (MNI)
to assess structural local and global network disruption
related to a WM lesion mask. We apply this methodology
to patients with Normal Pressure Hydrocephalus, and show
large amounts of orbital-frontal disruption.
|
3730. |
83 |
Integration of
Tractography with Deep Brain Stimulation Modeling
Kyle Taljan1,2, Angela Noecker2,
Ken Sakaie3, Mark Lowe3, and
Cameron McIntyre2
1Biomedical Engineering, Case Western Reserve
University, Cleveland, OH, United States, 2Biomedical
Engineering, Cleveland Clinic Lerner Research Institute,
Cleveland, OH, United States, 3Cleveland
Clinic Imaging Institute, Cleveland, OH, United States
Deep brain stimulation, an effective treatment of
movement disorders such as Parkinson's disease, can
cause cognitive side effects. It is hypothesized that
stimulation of tissue connected to motor cortex is
beneficial whereas stimulation of tissue connected to
nonmotor regions leads to side effects. Previous work
showed a reduction in side effects by optimizing
stimulation so that the volume of tissue activated was
limited to motor regions of the subthalamic nucleus. We
use tractography to compare anatomical connectivity of a
VTA associated with side effects and one that limited
side effects. The VTA associated with side effects
showed greater anatomical connectivity to non-motor
cortical regions than the model based VTA. This
preliminary result points to the potential of
integrating diffusion MR-based tractography with
stimulation modeling in deep brain stimulation to
improve patient outcomes.
|
3731. |
84 |
Characterization of
Pediatric Bipolar Disorder with Quantitative HARDI
Tractography Metrics
Ryan Payne Cabeen1, Daniel Dickstein2,
and David H Laidlaw1
1Computer Science, Brown University,
Providence, RI, United States, 2Psychiatry
& Human Behavior, Brown University, Providence, RI,
United States
We computed and compared quantitative diffusion
tractography metrics in three children with bipolar
disorder (BD) and three typically-developing controls
(TDC) without psychiatric illness. An automated process
was used to choose tracks connecting the amygdala and
accumbens, a track of interest (TOI) chosen a priori
from previous findings in voxel-based morphometry (VBM)
and resting state functional connectivity (RSFC)
analysis. We found decreases in mean FA and sum
length-weighted FA in left hemisphere tracks of the BD
group. No differences were found in right hemisphere
metrics or subcortical volumes.
|
3732. |
85 |
Understanding the Effects
of Prematurity on the Visual System using Diffusion MRI
Dolly Thai1, Deanne K Thompson1,2,
Lex W Doyle1,3, Jeanie Cheong1,3,
Michael J Kean1, Jeff Neil4,
Terrie E Inder1,4, Peter J Anderson1,
and Rod W Hunt1
1Murdoch Childrens Research Institute, Royal
Children's Hospital, University of Melbourne, Melbourne,
Victoria, Australia, 2Centre
for Neuroscience, Florey Neuroscience
Institutes,University of Melbourne, Melbourne, Victoria,
Australia, 3Royal
Women's Hospital, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia, 4St
Louis Children’s Hospital, Washington University in St
Louis, St Louis, Missouri, United States
Children born very preterm are at risk of developing
visual impairments. This study examines 142 very preterm
and 32 full-term 7 year old children scanned with a 3T
MRI scanner. Optic radiations were reconstructed using
constrained spherical deconvolution. Radial diffusivity
was significantly higher in preterm children, thus
myelination appears to be particularly disrupted,
especially in the more anterior segments of the optic
radiation. These changes were associated with visual
field defects and poorer visual acuity. In conclusion,
the microstructural organisation of the optic radiation
is less developed in preterm children, which negatively
impacts visual function at seven years.
|
3733. |
86 |
Quantitative Evaluation of
Cortico-callosal Wallerian Degeneration with Diffusion
Tensor Imaging in Moderate Traumatic Brain Injury
Richa Trivedi1, Maria M D'souza1,
Hemal Grover1, Ajay Chaudhary2,
Pawan Kumar1, Prabhjot Kaur1,
Rajendra P Tripathi1, and Subash Khushu1
1Institute of Nuclear Medicine and Allied
Sciences, Delhi, Delhi, India, 2Neurosurgery,
Dr. Ram Manohar Lohia Hospital, Delhi, Delhi, India
Given the widespread interhemispheric connections that
course through the corpus callosum (CC), callosal
pathway disruptions can have a profound impact on
cognitive functioning. Serial quantitative diffusion
tensor tractography was performed in five patients with
moderate unifrontal lobe TBI. On follow-up study,
significantly reduced callosal FA values were observed
on moving from controls to injured hemisphere through
contra-lateral normal appearing hemisphere in the
subregions of anterior CC. We conclude that DTT based
quantification in frontal lobe injury may be useful for
wide spread assessment of DAI in callosal fibers and
help in prognosticating disease outcome.
|
3734. |
87 |
Spread of discharges
through tracks identified with diffusion tractography may
explain transient splenial "lesions" in epilepsy
David Vaughan1, Jacques-Donald Tournier1,2,
Alan Connelly1,2, and Graeme Jackson1,2
1Brain Research Institute, Florey
Neuroscience Institutes, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia, 2Department
of Medicine, University of Melbourne, Victoria,
Australia
A transient "lesion" of the splenium of the corpus
callosum occasionally occurs in patients with epilepsy.
The cause remains unknown. We present probabilistic
fibre tracking in such a patient, from the ictal onset
zone to the contralateral region of seizure spread.
Tracks that traversed the corpus callosum all passed
through the splenium at the site of the lesion, and
similar tracks were identified in non-epileptic
controls. We suggest the lesion is related to excess
epileptic activity in this pathway.
|
3735. |
88 |
A Parametric Approach to
Evaluating the Statistical Significance of Pathway Dependent
Diffusion Measures
Mark J Lowe1, Ken E Sakaie1, Jian
Lin1, Lael Stone2, and Micheal D
Phillips1
1Imaging Institute, Cleveland Clinic,
Cleveland, OH, United States, 2Neurologic
Institute, Cleveland Clinic, Cleveland, OH, United
States
We have previously introduced pathway dependent
diffusion measures as a way of determining functionally
relevant disease burden in multiple sclerosis. This
method determines the mean diffusion properties (i.e.
FA, radial diffusivity, longitudinal diffusivity) along
a pathway determined with probabilistic tractography.
There is a significant drawback to the method in that
the sensitivity can be quite low due to the fact that
tissue diffusion parameters will vary substantially
along some pathways. In this study, we utilize a
parametric approach to determining local pathway
diffusion properties and derive a statistical approach
to determine if a given fiber path contains significant
disease burden.
|
3736. |
89 |
Skeletonized white matter
atlas and atlas-based segmentation
Shengwei Zhang1, and Konstantinos Arfanakis1
1Department of Biomedical Engineering,
Illinois Institute of Technology, Chicago, IL, United
States
This work demonstrated that diffusion imaging studies
employing automated ROI selection by means of
conventional atlas-based segmentation suffer from
misregistration. We adopted the main principles of TBSS
and proposed an alternative automated approach, termed
here “skeletonized atlas-based segmentation”, which is
relatively immune to misregistration. Furthermore, a new
skeletonized atlas was developed in ICBM152 space based
on the IIT2 DTI template. The combination of the whole
brain DTI template and skeletonized WM atlas has the
potential to increase the accuracy and sensitivity of
both voxel-wise and ROI analyses in DTI as well as
high-angular resolution diffusion imaging studies.
|
3737. |
90 |
Information Theory Based
Quantification Of DTI Alterations In Cognitive Impairment
Norbert W. Schuff1,2, Yu Zhang3,
Karl Young4, Howard Rosen4, and
Michael W. Weiner1,5
1UCSF, San Francisco, CA, United States, 2VAMC,
San Francisco, California, United States, 3UCSF,
San Francisco, California, United States, 4UCSF, 5VAMC
The best approach for maximizing information from
diffusion tensor imaging (DTI) is a matter of intense
debate, especially when it comes to quantifying the
integrity of nerve fiber bundles. We explored the value
of information theoretic measures, such as
Kullback-Leibler divergence, for quantifying DTI
variations along fibers as indeces of fiber uniformity.
Simulations suggest that the approach is useful for
capturing global and local features. We also applied the
approach to experimental DTI data from patients with
cognitive impairments, including Alzheimer’s disease
(AD). The results are consistent with the idea that AD
is associated with diminishing structures within fiber
bundles.
|
3738. |
91 |
Respiratory Triggered
Diffusion Tensor Imaging MR of the kidney at 3T
Lorenzo Mannelli1, Theodore J Dubinsky1,
Mariam Moshiri1, Manjiri K Dighe1,
and Jeffrey H Maki1
1University of Washington, Seattle, WA,
United States
The kidney is very appealing to be studied with DTI
because of the renal medulla radially oriented
architecture. The main challanges are differentiating
the vascular flow from the tubular flow, and an
acquisition tecnique easy to apply in clinical practice
|
3739. |
92 |
High-field brain
structural connectivity at 7T compared to 3T using HARDI
Liang Zhan1, Neda Jahanshad1,
Christophe Lenglet2, Bryon A. Mueller3,
Guillermo Sapiro4, Noam Harel2,
Kelvin O. Lim3, and Paul M. Thompson1
1Department of Neurology, University of
California, Los Angeles, Los Angeles, CA, United States, 2Center
for Magnetic Resonance Research, University of Minnesota
Medical School, Minneapolis, MN, United States, 3Dept.
of Psychiatry, Univ. of Minnesota, Minneapolis, MN,
United States, 4Department
of Electrical and Computer Engineering, University of
Minnesota, Minneapolis, MN, United States
High-field diffusion imaging can be used to map
anatomical connectivity in the living brain, but little
is known about how the resulting connectivity maps
compare to those obtained at lower fields. Five young
healthy subjects (two male, age: 32.4±14.6 years) were
scanned at 3T and with a 7T protocol with 1.5mm
isotropic voxels (called “7T-1.5mm” below). To assess
field strength effects while keeping voxel size
constant, we also scanned 2 of the 5 subjects using a
protocol called “7T-2mm” for comparison purposes.
Connections between rostral anterior cingulate and the
lateral orbitofrontal, caudal middle frontal and rostral
middle frontal cortex in the left hemisphere were more
prominent at 7T-1.5mm, and showed the most significant
differences by protocol. Smaller voxels allowed more
connections to be recovered, particularly shorter ones,
and this affected the relative prominence of different
connections in the matrices.
|
3740. |
93 |
Investigation of vibration
induced artifacts in clinical diffusion weighted imaging of
the brain
Madison Berl1, Lindsay Walker2,
Joelle Sarlls3, and Carlo Pierpaoli4
1Children's Research Institute, Children's
National Medical Center, Washington, DC, United States, 2Center
for Neuroscience and Regenerative Medicine, Uniformed
Services University of the Health Sciences, Bethesda,
MD, United States, 3STBB,
National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, MD, United
States,4NICHD, National Institutes of Health,
Bethesda, MD, United States
We expand on a systematic vibration artifact in three
important ways: 1) the artifact is more widespread than
first described, 2) we offer another potential solution
to reduce the artifact and 3) identify that the artifact
may be the basis of a clinical misinterpretation that
has been cited as evidence to change policy and
practice.
|
|
|
Electronic
Poster Session - Neuro B |
|
Click on
to view
the abstract pdf and click on
to view the
video presentation. (Not all presentations are available.)
Wednesday 9 May 2012
Exhibition Hall |
11:00 - 12:00 |
|
|
|
Computer # |
|
3741.
|
73 |
Brain Iron Levels Across
the Japanese Macaque Lifespan
Yosef A. Berlow1,2, Steve Kohama3,
James Pollaro1, Manoj Sammi1, and
William Rooney1,2
1Advanced Imaging Research Center, Oregon
Health & Science University, Portland, OR, United
States, 2Behavioral
Neuroscience, Oregon Health & Science University,
Portland, OR, United States, 3Oregon
National Primate Research Center, Oregon Health &
Science University, Portland, OR, United States
This study measured age associated brain iron
accumulation in Japanese macaques (JM) and humans.
Eighty-eight JM and 43 healthy human control subject
were included. Proton density and T2-weighted
TSE images were used to calculate R2 maps.
The effects of age on R2 were
modeled in caudate, putamen and pallidum. JM R2 values
increase rapidly during the first two decades of life
and then begin to plateau at levels that are much
greater than those seen in humans. These findings
suggest that JM accumulate brain iron throughout their
adulthood and attain brain iron concentrations that are
much greater than humans.
|
3742. |
74 |
Arterial spin labeling
reproducibility and potential for predicting hemodynamic
alterations in older adults at risk for Alzheimer’s disease
Tracy L. Wilson1, Brandon A. Ally2,3,
Erin P. Hussey3, Swati D. Rane1,
Tricia A. Thornton-Wells4,5, Shashwath A.
Meda4,5, John C. Gore1, and Manus
J. Donahue1,2
1Radiology and Radiological Sciences,
Vanderbilt University, Nashville, TN, United States, 2Psychiatry,
Vanderbilt University, Nashville, TN, 3Neurology,
Vanderbilt University, Nashville, TN, 4Center
for Human Genetics Research, Vanderbilt University,
Nashville, TN, 5Molecular
Physiology & Biophysics, Vanderbilt University,
Nashville, TN
Noninvasive MRI approaches capable of assessing
tissue-level modulations in cerebral hemodynamics hold
significant potential for gauging disease severity and
progression in patients with, and at-risk for,
Alzheimer's disease (AD). We implemented a customized
arterial spin labeling (ASL) sequence specifically
capable of assessing cerebral blood flow (CBF),
simultaneously in cortical and subcortical structures.
The ASL technique implemented showed high
reproducibility in young and older adults. In patients,
we observed positive relationships between cortical CBF
and cognitive performance in all volunteers, but an
inverse trend between hippocampus CBF and cognitive
performance in at-risk and control participants.
|
3743. |
75 |
Aging Effects on
Cerebrovascular Response to Breath Holdings as Measured by
Blood Oxygenation-Level Dependent MRI
Yuan-Yu Hsu1,2, Ho-Ling Liu3,
Ling-Yi Huang1,3, and Kun-Eng Lim1,2
1Radiology, Buddhist Tzu Chi General
Hospital-Taipei Branch, Xindien, Taipei, Taiwan, 2School
of Medicine, Tzu Chi University, Hualien, Hualien,
Taiwan,3Department of Medical Imaging and
Radiological Sciences, Chang Gung University, Taoyuan,
Taiwan
This study aimed to evaluate the regional differences in
cerebrovascular response to hypercapnia challenges
between young and elderly adults. Twenty young (F/M =
10/10, mean age = 28.2 y/o) and twenty elderly (F/M =
12/8, mean age = 64.4 y/o) adults were studied by 3-T
BOLD MRI during repeated 15-second breath-holdings.
Significant breath-hold regulated BOLD signal increases
were identified in gray matters. Compared to the young
group, the elderly had a 50% decrease in the activation
volume. There were significantly less BOLD signal
increase in amygdala and dentate nucleus in elderly than
in young adults (P < 0.001).
|
3744. |
76 |
Multi-modal MRI analysis
for assessing memory impairment in the early stages of AD
Swati Rane1, Tracy Porchak1,
Brandon Ally2, Erin Hussey2,
Tricia Thornton-Wells3,4, Shashwath Meda3,
John C Gore1,5, and Manus Donahue1,6
1Radiology and Radiological Sciences,
Vanderbilt University Institute of Imaging Science,
Vanderbilt University, Nashville, TN, United States,2Neurology,
Psychiatry, Vanderbilt University, Nashville, TN, United
States, 3Center
for Human Genetics Research, Vanderbilt University,
Nashville, TN, United States, 4Molecular
Physics and Biophysics, Vanderbilt University,
Nashville, TN, United States, 5Biomedical
Engineering, Vanderbilt University, Nashville, TN,
United States, 6Psychiatry,
Vanderbilt University, Nashville, TN, United States
A multi-modal comparison comprising of baseline BOLD and
ASL was employed to compare mechanisms of verbal memory
deficits in healthy older adults, adults at risk of
Alzheimer’s disease and adults with MCI. Alterations in
the default mode network and their correlation with
baseline blood flow were studied. Further, synchrony of
BOLD fluctuations between the hippocampus and the
precuneus/posterior cingulate regions of the brain was
evaluated and correlated with verbal memory (CERAD)
scores.
|
3745. |
77 |
Early alterations in
cerebral oxygen extraction in autosomal-dominant Alzheimer's
Disease
Dustin Kenneth Ragan1,2, Randall Bateman3,4,
Virginia D Buckles3,4, Jose A Pineda1,3,
John C Morris3,4, and Tammie LS Benzinger2,4
1Department of Pediatrics, Washington
University School of Medicine, St. Louis, MO, United
States, 2Department
of Radiology, Washington University School of Medicine,
St. Louis, MO, United States, 3Department
of Neurology, Washington University School of Medicine,
St. Louis, MO, United States,4Knight
Alzheimer's Disease Research Center, Washington
University School of Medicine, St. Louis, MO, United
States
We investigated early changes to cerebral oxygen
extraction in patients who had a familiar history of
autosomal-dominant Alzheimer’s Disease by measuring
magnetic susceptibility in cerebral veins. Oxygen
extraction was showed a decrease around the age of
onset, with a return to normal values 5 years after
onset. This may indicate an important early marker of
the disease process.
|
3746. |
78 |
A comparative study of
rCBF maps with Arterial Spin Labeling and FDG-PET in
Dementia and Alzheimer's Disease
Pablo Garcia-Polo Garcia1, Juan Antonio
Hernández-Tamames2, Roberto García-Álvarez3,
Eva Alfayate4, and Juan Álvarez-Linera5
1Neuroimaging Lab., Centre for Biomedical
Imaging, Pozuelo de Alarcón, Madrid, Spain, 2Universidad
Rey Juan Carlos, Móstoles, Madrid, Spain,3Research
and Collaborations Department, GE Healthcare, Buc,
France, 4Cien
Foundation - Centre for Alzheimer's Disease Queen Sofia
Foundation, Madrid, Spain, 5Hospital
Ruber Internacional, Madrid, Spain
Alzheimer's disease (AD) is a type of dementia that
exhibits decreased perfusion-metabolism and GM loss in
the brain. This work examines the correlation between
both rCBF-ASL and FDG-PET in a group of 24 subjects. In
addition, ASL was utilized in a second group of 99
subjects (Control, MCI and AD) to assess hypoperfusion
in AD. Significant correlation between rCBF and FDG-PET
was found. Hypoperfusion patterns were seen in posterior
cingulate and posterior lobes in AD. This work
demonstrates both: a high correlation between ASL and
FDG-PET, and the capability of ASL to become a promising
technique to monitor the AD.
|
3747. |
79 |
Atlas-based quantification
with machine-learning based characterization of DTI from
patients with mild cognitive impairment and Alzheimer’s
disease
Kenichi Oishi1, Michelle M Mielke2,3,
Michael I Miller4, Marilyn S Albert5,
Constantine G Lyketsos2, and Susumu Mori6,7
1Radiology, Johns Hopkins University,
Baltimore, MD, United States, 2Psychiatry
and Behavioral Sciences, Johns Hopkins University, 32Division
of Epidemiology, College of Medicine, Mayo Clinic, 4Center
for Imaging Science, Johns Hopkins University, 5Neurology,
Johns Hopkins University,6Radiology, Johns
Hopkins University, 7F.M.
Kirby Research Center for Functional Brain Imaging,
Kennedy Krieger Institute
We applied a machine-learning framework to characterize
anatomical alterations of early-stage Alzheimer’s
disease (AD), and to investigate a classifier that can
predict conversion from mild cognitive impairment (MCI)
to AD within 36 months. The Eve atlas was used to
measure the fractional anisotropy (FA) and mean
diffusivity (MD) of 148 brain structures, followed by
principal component analysis (PCA) and support vector
machine-based classification. PCA detected subtle but
widespread FA&MD alterations related to AD. The trained
classifier could differentiate MCI-converters from
non-converters with sensitivity of 0.67 and specificity
of 1, supporting the potential of DTI in identifying
early-stage AD patients.
|
3748.
|
80 |
The LoCo: a measure of
gray matter structural connectivity loss and its application
to neurodegenerative disorders
Amy Kuceyeski1, Yu Zhang2,3, and
Ashish Raj1
1Radiology, Weill Cornell Medical College,
New York, New York, United States, 2Center
for Imaging of Neurodegenerative Diseases, Department of
Veteran's Affairs Medical Center, San Francisco, CA,
United States, 3Radiology,
University of California San Francisco, San Francisco,
CA, United States
We implement a metric called Comparative Connectivity
Loss (CCL) that gives the amount of structural white
matter connectivity disruption incurred by a gray matter
region for a particular pattern of white matter
integrity loss. This metric is calculated on a standard
atlas for three groups, Alzheimer's disease, fronto-temporal
dementia, and age-matched normal controls. We show
significant correlations of CCL with atrophy patterns in
the two diseases. In addition, we show that the CCL
outperforms gray matter atrophy when classifying
individuals into the three groups, while having similar
levels of accuracy with white matter integrity measures
of radial and longitudinal diffusivity.
|
3749. |
81 |
WHITE MATTER CHANGES IN
PRIMARY PROGGRESSIVE APHASIA: A TRACT-BASED SPATIAL
STATISTICS ANALYSIS
Nico D. Papinutto1,2, Sebastiano Galantucci2,3,
Jorge Jovicich1, and Maria Luisa
Gorno-Tempini2
1CIMeC, University of Trento, Mattarello, TN,
Italy, 2University
of California San Francisco, San Francisco, CA, United
States, 3Scientific
Institute and University Hospital San Raffaele, Milano,
MI, Italy
The purpose of this study was to evaluate the extent and
localization of white matter (WM) damages in individuals
with primary progressive aphasia (PPA) by using
Tract-Based Spatial Statistics (TBSS), extending the
findings of previous voxel and tract-based analyses of
multi-subject Diffusion Tensor Imaging (DTI) data. WM
integrity was studied by comparing three groups of
patients (three major subtypes of PPA: non-fluent/agrammatic
(PNFA), semantic variant (SD) and logopenic variant
(LPA)) with a group of age-matched healthy controls.
Characteristic patterns of WM damage in the three major
variants of primary progressive aphasia were evidenced
and characterized by means of TBSS.
|
3750. |
82 |
Multivariate analysis on
hemispheric asymmetry alterations in differentiating mild
cognitive impairment and Alzheimer's disease from healthy
aging
Xiaojing Long1, Weiqi Liao1,
Chunxiang Jiang1, Bensheng Qiu1,
Yang Liu1, and Lijuan Zhang*1
1Paul C. Lauterbur Research Center for
Biomedical Imaging, Shenzhen Institutes of Advanced
Technology, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Shenzhen,
Guangdong, China
Relevant structural variates were collectively explored
for a comprehensive morphological assessment on brain
hemispheric asymmetry alterations among groups of
healthy aging, mild cognitive impairment (MCI)
converters, and Alzheimer’s disease (AD). Region
specific preservation, reduction or reverse of
hemispheric asymmetries were found to differ among
groups of MCI and AD as compared with healthy aging,
which may reflect the underlying mechanisms useful for
disease diagnosis, differentiation and monitoring of MCI
and AD.
|
3751.
|
83 |
Longitudinal Effects of
Irradiation and Voluntary Exercise on Hippocampal Gray
Matter Loss
Sarah Biedermann1, Johannes Fuss2,
Claudia Falfán-Melgoza3, Lei Zheng3,
Alexander Sartorius3, Gabi Ende1,
Peter Gass2, and Wolfgang Weber-Fahr3
1Neuroimaging, Central Institute of Mental
Health, Mannheim, Germany, 2Animal
Models in Psychiatry, Central Institute of Mental
Health, Mannheim, Germany, 3Translational
Imaging, Central Institute of Mental Health, Mannheim,
Germany
To reveal underlying mechanisms of exercise-induced gray
matter increase, mice underwent hippocampal irradiation,
blocking hippocampal neurogenesis, followed by voluntary
wheel-running. Voxel based morphometry was performed
before and after the exercise period. Age related
decreased hippocampal gray matter was seen in all mice
after the treatment period. Sham irradiated running mice
had higher hippocampal gray matter compared to sedentary
mice and a decreased loss of hippocampal gray matter
over time, whereas irradiated mice did not have higher
hippocampal gray matter after exercise. These findings
indicate mechanisms of neuroplasticity in exercise
induced hippocampal alterations.
|
3752.
|
84 |
Automated multi-atlas
segmentation of anatomical brain MR images from elderly
subjects.
Aikaterini Kotrotsou1, Niranjini Rajendran2,
David A. Bennett2, and Konstantinos Arfanakis1,2
1Department of Biomedical Engineering,
Illinois Institute of Technology, Chicago, IL, United
States, 2Rush
Alzheimer's Disease Center, Rush University Medical
Center, Chicago, IL, United States
An increasing number of studies use brain MRI to assess
volumetric changes due to neurodegenerative diseases in
the elderly. Crucial to these studies is segmentation of
anatomical brain MRI data. Multi-atlas segmentation is
one of the approaches used for automated labeling;
however the performance of this method in subjects with
age-related atrophy has not been thoroughly
investigated. In this work, the performance of
multi-atlas segmentation in data from elderly subjects
(>80 years of age) was compared to that of FreeSurfer.
It was demonstrated that multi-atlas segmentation
provides results that are similar to those of FreeSurfer,
in a fully automated manner.
|
3753.
|
85 |
Compositive morphological
alterations in healthy ageing, mild cognitive impairment and
Alzheimer's disease: An MANCOVA study
Weiqi LIAO1,2, Xiaojing LONG1,2,
Lijuan ZHANG*1,2, Chunxiang JIANG1,2,
and Wenhui HUANG1,2
1Paul C Lauterbur Research Center for
Biomedical Imaging, Shenzhen Institutes of Advanced
Technology, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Shenzhen,
Guangdong Province, China, 2Key
Lab of Health Informatics, Shenzhen Institutes of
Advanced Technology, Chinese Academy of Sciences,
Shenzhen, Guangdong Province, China
Multivariate analysis of covariance was performed in
addition to ANOVA to compositively evaluate brain
morphological alteration indexed by surface area,
curvature, cortical thickness, and subjacent white
matter volume in groups of healthy ageing, mild
cognitive impairment (MCI) converter and Alzheimer¡¯s
disease (AD). Age independent global rather than
regional specific alterations were revealed to differ
significantly among the aforementioned groups. MANCOVA
may possess the potential powerfulness of
differentiating MCI and AD from healthy ageing where
single structural index was not adequate to do so.
|
3754. |
86 |
High resolution MRI at
21.1 T of the hippocampus and temporal lobe white matter in
the differential classification of Alzheimer’s Disease and
Diffuse Lewy Body Disorder
Parastou Foroutan1,2, Melissa M Murray3,
Shinsuke Fujioka4, Katherine J Schweitzer4,
Dennis W Dickson3, Zbigniew K Wszolek4,
and Samuel Colles Grant1,5
1Center for Interdisciplinary Magnetic
Resonance, The National High Magnetic Field Laboratory,
Tallahassee, Florida, United States, 2Imaging,
The H. Lee Moffitt Cancer Center, Tampa, Florida, United
States, 3Pathology
and Neuroscience, The Mayo Clinic, Jacksonville,
Florida, United States,4Neurology, The Mayo
Clinic, Jacksonville, Florida, United States, 5Chemical
& Biomedical Engineering, The Florida State University,
Tallahassee, Florida, United States
The two most common forms of dementia are Alzheimer’s
disease (AD) and diffuse Lewy Body disorder (DLBD), but
clinical similarities make it difficult to distinguish
between them. In this study, fixed postmortem sections
of human hippocampi diagnosed with AD and DLBD were
evaluated using MRI at 21.1 T. The samples were analyzed
using high resolution 3D datasets, diffusion-weighted
imaging and relaxation maps of T2 and
T2* compared to histology to identify MR
biomarkers specific to the different pathologies. Data
suggests that lower T2 and
T2* times are correlated with chronic DLBD
while increased relaxation and ADC coincide with chronic
AD.
|
3755. |
87 |
Distinct longitudinal
cortical change in frontotemporal lobar degeneration and
Alzheimer's disease
Brian B Avants1, Corey McMillan2,
Philip A Cook1, James C. Gee3, and
Murray Grossman2
1University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia,
PA, United States, 2Neurology,
University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA, United
States, 3Radiology,
University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA, United
States
We employ quantitative longitudinal neuroimaging to
contrast cortical atrophy rates between controls and
patients with Alzheimer's disease (AD) or frontotemporal
degeneration (FTD) defined on the basis of
autopsy-confirmed cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) values of
tau:Abeta1-42 ratio. We demonstrate that unbiased
quantification of specific cortical regions improves
detection power over whole brain analysis in both AD and
FTD.
|
3756. |
88 |
Does Fluid Intake Before
Scanning Affect Water Content Measured in Brain?
Sandra M. Meyers1, Irene M. Vavasour2,
Cornelia Laule2,3, Shannon H. Kolind4,5,
Roger Tam2,6, Burkhard Maedler7,
David K. Li2,6, Alex L. MacKay1,2,
and Anthony L. Traboulsee8
1Physics and Astronomy, University of British
Columbia, Vancouver, BC, Canada, 2Radiology,
University of British Columbia, Vancouver, BC, Canada,3Pathology
and Laboratory Medicine, University of British Columbia,
Vancouver, BC, Canada, 4FMRIB
Centre, University of Oxford, Oxford, United Kingdom, 5Neuroimaging,
University College London, London, United Kingdom, 6MS/MRI
Research Group, University of British Columbia,
Vancouver, BC, Canada, 7University
of Bonn, Bonn, Germany, 8Medicine,
University of British Columbia, Vancouver, BC, Canada
Accurate water content (WC) measurement is valuable for
assessing edema and monitoring effects of therapy. While
hydration has been shown to significantly affect brain
volume, the effect of fluid intake on MR brain WC is
currently unknown. To investigate this question, 20
healthy volunteers were scanned at 3T with 3DT2 and IR
sequences four times: (1) baseline, (2) after consuming
3L of water, and (3/4) twice after overnight
dehydration. WC was calculated as the integral under the
T2 distribution, relative to that of a water standard,
with additional corrections. Hydration did not have a
significant, measurable effect on brain WC.
|
3757. |
89 |
3T Automated High
Resolution MTR in Alzheimer's Disease and Healthy Elderly
Subjects
Ying Wu1,2, Ryan Hutten1, Ana
Barion3,4, Michael Mercury3,4,
Zoran Grujic5, Victoria Braund3,4,
Christopher Glielmi6, Nadia Abbasi1,
Ann Ragin7, and Robert R. Edelman1
1Radiology, NorthShore University Health
System, Evanston, IL, United States, 2Radiology,
University of Chicago, Chicago, IL, United States,3Neurology,
NorthShore University Health System, Glenview, IL,
United States, 4Neurology,
University of Chicago, Chicago, IL, United States,5Neurology,
Central DuPage Hospital Neuroscience Institute,
Winfield, IL, United States, 6Siemens
Healthcare, Chicago, IL, United States, 7Radiology,
Northwestern University, Chicago, IL, United States
We demonstrate the findings of a comprehensive automated
high resolution magnetization transfer imaging at 3T.
The method detected subtle brain changes in the
hippocampus, caudate, putamen, cerebral cortex and white
matter and differentiated mild Alzheimer’s group from
the normal elderly control group. The field strength at
3T, as well as increased scan resolution for accurate
quantification in small brain regions may have
contributed to the additional positive findings that
complement other MRI-derived measures of disease burden
in AD. In addition, this automated method entirely
removes operator induced measurement errors, which may
contribute to both longitudinal and multi-center studies
for the standardization of quantification.
|
3758.
|
90 |
A longitudinal study on
age-related changes of T1rho relaxation in rat brain
Feng Zhao1, Jing Yuan1, Tian Jiu2,
Gang Lu2, Queenie Chan3, Wai-Sang
Poon2, and Yi-Xiang Wang1
1Department of Imaging and Interventional
Radiology, The Chinese University of Hong Kong, Shatin,
N.T., Hong Kong, 2Division
of Neurosurgery, Department of Surgery, The Chinese
University of Hong Kong, Shatin, N.T., Hong Kong, 3Philips
Healthcare, Hong Kong
An alternate MRI contrast mechanism, T1rho relaxation,
has been suggested as a sensitive biomarker to detect
Alzheimer¡¯ disease and Parkinson¡¯s disease in
patients. However, whether normal brain aging is
associated with brain T1rho relaxation change remains
unknown. In this study, we longitudinally measured T1rho
values in the bilateral thalamus, hippocampus and
cortices of 18 male Sprague-Dawley rats at 5, 8, 10 and
15 months old. A trend of T1rho value rising in these
rat brain regions following aging was found.
|
3759.
|
91 |
Magnetization Transfer
Contrast MRI as a Diagnostic Tool for Alzheimer’s Disease
Carlos J Perez-Torres1,2, and Robia G Pautler1,2
1Interdepartmental Program in Translational
Biology and Molecular Medicine, Baylor College of
Medicine, Houston, Texas, United States, 2Molecular
Physiology and Biophysics, Baylor College of Medicine,
Houston, Texas, United States
Early diagnosis of Alzheimer’s Disease (AD) remains a
critical challenge for the management of this disease.
Most work has focused on non-invasive imaging of amyloid
beta plaques. However, it is known that amyloid
neurotoxicity begins before plaque formation, so
techniques are needed that can identify AD before plaque
formation. In this work, we apply Magnetization Transfer
Contrast (MTC), an MRI methodology already in use
clinically. Our results show an increase in MTC signal
that predates plaque formation in the Tg2576 mouse model
of AD. The source of the MTC signal appears to be Tau
and not the expected amyloid beta.
|
3760. |
92 |
Quantitative 7T Detection
of Gadoteridol in the Ventricles of the Aging Human Brain
Valerie C. Anderson1, David P. Lenar1,
Phillip C. Berryhill1, Joseph F. Quinn2,
Jeffrey A. Kaye2, and William D. Rooney3
1Neurological Surgery, Oregon Health &
Science University, Portland, OR, United States, 2Neurology,
Oregon Health & Science University, Portland, OR, United
States, 3Advanced
Imaging Research Center, Oregon Health & Science
University, Portland, OR, United States
1H 2O R 1 values
were determined in the superior lateral ventricles of 34
healthy older subjects (68 6
yrs; 13 M, 21 F) at 7T before and 3 times (within 50
min) after gadoteridol (CR) administration. Fractional
CSF volume was determined by segmentation of structural
T 1-w images. A significant inverse
correlation of pre-CR R 1 values
with ventricular volume was observed. R 1 values
increased at each time point after injection of CR,
confirming that administration of CR increases R 1 in
the ventricles of the human brain. R 1 values
after CR administration were increased significantly
more in women than men.
|
3761. |
93 |
Postmortem MRI Reveals
Alterations in T2 Associated
with Histopathologically Verified Alzheimer’s Disease and
other Pathology in the Elderly Human Brain
Robert Dawe1, Julie Schneider1,
David Bennett1, and Konstantinos Arfanakis1,2
1Rush Alzheimer's Disease Center, Rush
University Medical Center, Chicago, IL, United States, 2Department
of Biomedical Engineering, Illinois Institute of
Technology, Chicago, IL, United States
Using postmortem MRI, we mapped T2 in
228 fixed cerebral hemispheres. After spatial
registration, we performed voxelwise analysis of
covariance to identify T2 alterations
associated with histopathologically confirmed
Alzheimer’s disease and other neuropathology among the
elderly. T2 prolongation
was observed in association with Alzheimer’s disease in
the white matter of the temporal, frontal, and parietal
lobes. T2 prolongation
in association with gross infarcts was observed
throughout the majority of white matter and was most
intense in the frontal lobe. This study demonstrates the
utility of postmortem T2 mapping
and provides candidates for MRI-based biomarkers of
disease.
|
3762. |
94 |
Semi-automatic detection
of cerebral microbleeds on clinical 3.0T T2*-weighted images
using the radial symmetry transform
Hugo J. Kuijf1, Manon Brundel2,
Max A. Viergever1, Geert Jan Biessels2,
and Koen L. Vincken1
1Image Sciences Institute, University Medical
Center Utrecht, Utrecht, Netherlands, 2Department
of Neurology, Rudolf Magnus Institute of NeuroScience,
UMC Utrecht
The current standard for cerebral microbleed detection
is visual rating, which is laborious and has limited
reproducibility. Semi-automated methods for detection of
microbleeds on clinical images have been suggested
before, but suffer from a large number of false
positives. In this study, we present a method for
microbleed detection based on the radial symmetry
transform. This results in a high sensitivity of 75% and
a limited number of false positives, requiring just two
minutes of rater time to censor them. Furthermore, the
method outperforms other known methods in terms of
specificity.
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3763. |
95 |
White matter
microstructure in a healthy population aged 50-65; automated
tractography method and TBSS.
Live Eikenes1, Eelke Visser2, and
Asta Håberg1
1Department of Neuroscience, Norwegian
University of Science and Technology, Trondheim, Norway, 2Donders
Institute for Brain, Cognition and Behaviour, Centre for
Cognitive Neuroimaging, Radboud University Nijmegen,
Nijmegen, Netherlands
White matter (WM) microstructure were studied at the
population level in a cohort of 1006 healthy
participants (50-65 years) using a new automated
tractography method and tract-based spatial statistics (TBSS).
The tractography results demonstrated that mean
fractional anisotropy (FA) and volume of corpus callosum
was higher in males compared to females. TBSS showed
decreased FA in large areas of the white matter with
increasing age, and higher FA in females than males in
the occipital lobe, and higher FA in males than females
in the deep central WM structures and in association
tracts in the frontal and temporal lobes.
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3764. |
96 |
T2-weighted MRI increases
machine learning accuracy in Alzheimer's disease
L. Z. Diaz-de-Grenu1, G. B. Williams1,
J. Acosta-Cabronero1, J. M. Pereira1,
and P. J. Nestor1
1Clinical Neurosciences, University of
Cambridge, Cambridge, Cambridgeshire, United Kingdom
Support vector machines (SVM) using T1-weighted images
offer moderate accuracy in diagnosing Alzheimer’s
disease (AD). Recent work suggests, however, that
T2-weighted scans may contain more pathologically
relevant information. This study, therefore, tested if
T2 data could improve SVM classification. T1 and T2 were
compared in whole-brain images and regions of interest (ROI)
known to be affected in AD. An ROI focused on the mesial
temporal lobe (known to be atrophic) yielded similar
accuracy for T1 and T2 (both 88.5%), however adding ROIs
known to be rich in beta-amyloid improved diagnostic
accuracy (92.3%) but only when using T2 data.
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