14:15 |
0117.
|
Literacy and the Arcuate
Fasciculus
Michel Thiebaut de Schotten1,2, Laurent Cohen1,
Eduardo Amemiya3, Lucia Braga3,
and Stanislas Dehaene4
1Brain and Spine Institute, Paris, France, 2Natbrainlab
- Institute of Psychiatry, London, United Kingdom, 3SARAH
Network–International Center for Neurosciences and
Rehabilitation, Brasilia, Brazil, 4Collège
de France, Paris, France
The acquisition of literacy results from an effortful
learning process that leads to functional changes in
several cortical regions. We explored whether learning
to read also leads to anatomical changes within the left
intrahemispheric white matter pathways that interconnect
these regions. We revealed that the acquisition of
literacy is associated with a reinforcement of left
temporo-parietal connections whose microstructure
predicts overall reading performance and the functional
specialization of the Visual Word Form Area. This
anatomical magnetic resonance imaging marker may be
useful to predict developmental reading disorders.
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14:27 |
0118.
|
A Combined High Spatial-
and High Angular-Resolution Diffusion MRI Atlas of the Human
Brainstem and Thalamus
Evan Calabrese1, Christine Hulette2,
and G. Allan Johnson3
1Biomedical Engineering, Duke University,
Durham, North Carolina, United States, 2Pathology,
Duke University, Durham, North Carolina, United States,3Radiology,
Duke University, Durham, North Carolina, United States
Deep brain stimulation (DBS) provides symptomatic relief
from a number of otherwise refractory neurologic
conditions through stimulation of small structures in
the brainstem and diencephalon. As researchers and
clinicians continue to investigate new DBS targets,
there is a need for accurate 3D maps of brainstem
anatomy and structural connectivity. Diffusion MRI can
provide important insight, but clinical studies lack the
spatial and/or angular (diffusion) resolution needed for
detailed mapping. We present a high spatial- and high
angular-resolution diffusion MRI atlas of the postmortem
human brainstem and thalamus with an emphasis on
structural mapping of DBS targets.
|
14:39 |
0119.
|
Contralateral
cerebello-thalamo-cortical pathways with prominent
involvement of associative areas in humans in vivo
Fulvia Palesi1,2, Donald Tournier3,4,
Fernando Calamante3,4, Nils Muhlert5,6,
Gloria Castellazzi2,7, Declan Chard5,8,
Egidio D'Angelo2,9, and Claudia A. M.
Wheeler-Kingshott5
1Department of Physics, University of Pavia,
Pavia, Pavia, Italy, 2Brain
Connectivity Center, National Neurological Institute C.
Mondino, Pavia, Pavia, Italy, 3The
Florey Institute of Neuroscience and Mental Health,
Melbourne Brain Centre, Heidelberg, Australia, 4Department
of Medicine, Austin Health and Northern Health,
University of Melbourne, Heidelberg, Australia, 5NMR
Research Unit, Department of Neuroinflammation, Queen
Square MS Centre, UCL Institute of Neurology, London,
United Kingdom, 6Department
of Psychology, Cardiff University, Cardiff, United
Kingdom, 7Department
of Industrial and Information Engineering, University of
Pavia, Pavia, Italy, 8National
Institute for Health Research, UCLH Biomedical Research
Centre, London, United Kingdom, 9Department
of Brain and Behavioural Sciences, University of Pavia,
Pavia, Italy
In addition to motor functions, growing evidence
indicates that in humans the cerebellum plays a
significant role in cognition. This is occurs through
connections with cerebral associative areas via synapsis
in the thalamus. While recognizing that tractography
provides an indirect evidence of anatomical connectivity
between regions, using advanced diffusion MRI
tractography we aimed to characterise the
cerebello-thalamo-cortical pathway in terms of
functional and anatomical areas touched by streamlines.
Almost 80% of the streamlines reached the cerebellar
hemispheres on one side and the associative cerebral
cortex on the other, suggesting a prominent connectivity
and supporting the coevolution of the two structures.
|
14:51 |
0120. |
Multiple Echo and Inversion
Time MPRAGE with Inner Loop GRAPPA Acceleration and
Prospective Motion Correction for Minimally Distorted
Multispectral Brain Morphometry
Andre J. W. van der Kouwe1, M. Dylan Tisdall1,
Himanshu Bhat2, Bruce Fischl1, and
Jonathan R. Polimeni1
1Radiology, Massachusetts General Hospital,
Charlestown, MA, United States, 2Siemens
Healthcare USA, Charlestown, MA, United States
Conventional MPRAGE suffers from blurring in the inner
phase encoding direction (between inversions) and
readout direction, due to T1 and T2* decay that broadens
the point spread functions in these directions,
respectively. This can be mitigated by combining
multiple GRAPPA accelerated phase encoding blocks and
multiple higher bandwidth echoes (shorter readouts that
also reduce susceptibility distortion), respectively.
This also enables estimation of absolute T1 and T2*
times for each voxel. To minimize blurring, real-time
prospective motion tracking with EPI volume navigators
is included. The resulting generalized MPRAGE sequence
provides high quality images for brain morphometry
without affecting total acquisition time.
|
15:03 |
0121. |
Quantitative properties
(water content, relaxometry, MT) of the post mortem brain: a
baseline for normal tissue
Ana-Maria Oros-Peusquens1 and
N. Jon Shah1,2
1INM-4, Research Centre Jülich, Jülich,
Germany, 2Department
of Neurology, RWTH Aachen University, Aachen, Germany
MRI of fixed tissue is increasingly used to investigate
the brain. However, properties of tissue change with
fixation. This study investigates post mortem
formalin-fixed brains quantitatively in order to provide
a baseline for MR parameters characteristic of healthy
brain tissue. The variability of several quantitative
MRI parameters is characterized in fixed brain tissue
obtained from donors unaffected by neurological
conditions. Among other parameters, quantitative water
content determined non-invasively with MRI is reported
on whole human post mortem brains for the first time to
our knowledge. Correlations between different parameters
were investigated and compared to the same quantities
measured in vivo.
|
15:15 |
0122. |
Visualizing Intrathalamic
Structures with Combined Use of MPRAGE and SWI at 7T
Allen Newton1,2, Benoit Dawant3,
and Pierre D'Haese3
1Radiology and Radiological Sciences,
Vanderbilt University, Nashville, TN, United States, 2Institute
of Imaging Science, Vandebrilt University, Nashville,
TN, United States, 3Electrical
Engineering and Computer Science, Vanderbilt University,
Nashville, TN, United States
Visualizing intrathalamic structures anatomically is
important for guidance of surgical interventions, as
well as validating existing thalamic parcellations from
functional connectivity or DTI tractography, though it
has proven quite difficult. Recent reports have begun to
identify methods capable of identifying these structures
via susceptibility weighted imaging, or by visualizing
white matter boundaries between these structures using
optimized MPRAGE acquisitions. We present evidence of
the potential for the combined use of these techniques
to increase the structures that can identified on an
individual level. Furthermore, we demonstrate the
utility of imaging with MPRAGE imaging with shorter
inerversion delays for intrathalamic parcellation.
|
15:27 |
0123. |
Region-specific
microstructure of cortical areas revealed with high angular
resolution diffusion MR microimaging
Manisha Aggarwal1, Olga Pletnikova2,
Juan Troncoso2, and Susumu Mori1
1Department of Radiology, Johns Hopkins
University School of Medicine, Baltimore, MD, United
States, 2Department
of Pathology, Johns Hopkins University School of
Medicine, Baltimore, MD, United States
We demonstrate high angular resolution diffusion MR
microimaging to resolve the region-specific
microstructure of cortical areas in the fixed human
brain. Diffusion MRI of cortical tissue microstructure
is challenged by both the low anisotropy in gray matter
microenvironments and the level of resolution necessary
to delineate the layered architecture. Here, using 3D
gradient and spin echo based acquisition, HARDI data of
cortical specimens were acquired with 30 diffusion
directions at 90 µm isotropic resolution. The diffusion
micro-imaging data of the prefrontal, primary motor, and
primary visual areas revealed the region-specific
laminar microstructure of cortical gray matter with
unprecedented detail.
|
15:39 |
0124.
|
Brain volume variations in
postmenopausal women: A voxel-based morphometry (VBM) study -
permission withheld
Tae-Hoon Kim1 and
Gwang-Woo Jeong2
1Research Institute of Medical Imaging,
Chonnam National University Medical School, Gwangju,
Korea, 2Radiology,
Chonnam National University Medical School, Gwangju,
Korea
During the past two decades, several studies in females
of animal models and human have been performed to unveil
the reproductive system changes and the complex
interactions with the ovaries. However, morphologic
variations in the central nerve system following
menopause have not yet been studied. Therefore, this
study utilized voxel-based morphormetry (VBM) to
evaluate the age-related changes and the effects of
menopause on the brain volumes in postmenopausal women.
|
15:51 |
0125. |
Structural brain changes
after rotarod training in mice
Jan Scholz1, Yosuke Niibori2, Paul
Frankland2,3, and Jason Lerch1,4
1Mouse Imaging Centre, Hospital for Sick
Children, Toronto, ON, Canada, 2Program
in Neurosciences and Mental Health, Hospital for Sick
Children, Toronto, ON, Canada, 3Department
of Psychology & Physiology, University of Toronto,
Toronto, ON, Canada, 4Medical
Biophysics, University of Toronto, Toronto, ON, Canada
Here we investigate how rotarod training affects brain
volume and microstrucure using ex-vivo MRI in mice. The
rotarod is a standard test that taxes motor coordination
and balance. Volume of motor and balance-related regions
increases after rotarod training. Volume of the motor
cortex is positively correlated with rotarod performace.
Diffusion imaging indicates that trained mice have
higher FA in the hippocampus. Time spent on the rotarod
is associated with higher FA in the hippocampus and
lower FA in V1. By using complementary measures of
microstructure and volume this study reveals the
substantial structural reorganization of the adult mouse
brain following a brief period of motor training.
|
16:03 |
0126. |
Hippocampal surface
dentation characteristics through sub-pixel segmentation
Yi Gao1 and
Lawrence Ver Hoef1
1University of Alabama at Birmingham,
Birmingham, AL, United States
We present a segmentation scheme utilizing sub-voxel
precision for the hippocampal dentation structure
extraction from 3T MR images. This reveals the degree of
dentation varies between normal individuals from
prominently dentated to minimally dentated.
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