| Literature DB >> 24409141 |
Audrey R Verde1, Francois Budin1, Jean-Baptiste Berger1, Aditya Gupta2, Mahshid Farzinfar1, Adrien Kaiser1, Mihye Ahn3, Hans Johnson4, Joy Matsui4, Heather C Hazlett1, Anuja Sharma5, Casey Goodlett6, Yundi Shi1, Sylvain Gouttard5, Clement Vachet7, Joseph Piven1, Hongtu Zhu3, Guido Gerig5, Martin Styner8.
Abstract
Diffusion tensor imaging has become an important modality in the field of neuroimaging to capture changes in micro-organization and to assess white matter integrity or development. While there exists a number of tractography toolsets, these usually lack tools for preprocessing or to analyze diffusion properties along the fiber tracts. Currently, the field is in critical need of a coherent end-to-end toolset for performing an along-fiber tract analysis, accessible to non-technical neuroimaging researchers. The UNC-Utah NA-MIC DTI framework represents a coherent, open source, end-to-end toolset for atlas fiber tract based DTI analysis encompassing DICOM data conversion, quality control, atlas building, fiber tractography, fiber parameterization, and statistical analysis of diffusion properties. Most steps utilize graphical user interfaces (GUI) to simplify interaction and provide an extensive DTI analysis framework for non-technical researchers/investigators. We illustrate the use of our framework on a small sample, cross sectional neuroimaging study of eight healthy 1-year-old children from the Infant Brain Imaging Study (IBIS) Network. In this limited test study, we illustrate the power of our method by quantifying the diffusion properties at 1 year of age on the genu and splenium fiber tracts.Entities:
Keywords: DTI atlas building; diffusion imaging quality control; diffusion tensor imaging; magnetic resonance imaging; neonatal neuroimaging; white matter pathways
Year: 2014 PMID: 24409141 PMCID: PMC3885811 DOI: 10.3389/fninf.2013.00051
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Neuroinform ISSN: 1662-5196 Impact factor: 4.081