| Literature DB >> 30459566 |
Emmanuel Mandonnet1, Silvio Sarubbo2, Laurent Petit3.
Abstract
The heterogeneity and complexity of white matter (WM) pathways of the human brain were discretely described by pioneers such as Willis, Stenon, Malpighi, Vieussens and Vicq d'Azyr up to the beginning of the 19th century. Subsequently, novel approaches to the gross dissection of brain internal structures have led to a new understanding of WM organization, notably due to the works of Reil, Gall and Burdach highlighting the fascicular organization of WM. Meynert then proposed a definitive tripartite organization in association, commissural and projection WM pathways. The enduring anatomical work of Dejerine at the turn of the 20th century describing WM pathways in detail has been the paramount authority on this topic (including its terminology) for over a century, enriched sporadically by studies based on blunt Klingler dissection. Currently, diffusion-weighted magnetic resonance imaging (DWI) is used to reveal the WM fiber tracts of the human brain in vivo by measuring the diffusion of water molecules, especially along axons. It is then possible by tractography to reconstitute the WM pathways of the human brain step by step at an unprecedented level of precision in large cohorts. However, tractography algorithms, although powerful, still face the complexity of the organization of WM pathways, and there is a crucial need to benefit from the exact definitions of the trajectories and endings of all WM fascicles. Beyond such definitions, the emergence of DWI-based tractography has mostly revealed strong heterogeneity in naming the different bundles, especially the long-range association pathways. This review addresses the various terminologies known for the WM association bundles, aiming to describe the rules of arrangements followed by these bundles and to propose a new nomenclature based on the structural wiring diagram of the human brain.Entities:
Keywords: association pathways; dissection; human brain; nomenclature; tractography; white matter anatomy
Year: 2018 PMID: 30459566 PMCID: PMC6232419 DOI: 10.3389/fnana.2018.00094
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Neuroanat ISSN: 1662-5129 Impact factor: 3.856
Figure 1The first illustration of brain anatomy reveals the gross white matter (WM) organization. (A) One of the first representations of cerebral circumvolution superficial to the WM in Anatomica Capitis Humani (Dryander, 1536). (B) Horizontal slice of a human head showing the lateral ventricles, the WM and (less precisely) the gray matter (GM) in De Humani Corporis Fabrica Libri Septem (Vesalius, 1543). (C,D) Tabula VI and XV of Vieussens’s (1684) Nevrographia universalis, respectively. (C) A superior section of the human brain at the level of the centrum ovale (B) after exposing and folding forward the corpus callosum (C) and (D), the WM tracts projecting from the centrum ovale (A) through the corpora striata (C,E).
Synonyms and translation of the terms used to describe the main associated fascicles, adapted from Swanson (2015) Neuroanatomical terminology—A lexicon of Classical Origins and Historical Foundations.
| General name and definition | Earlier synonyms and/or translation |
|---|---|
| Cingulum (Cing) | |
| External capsule (EC) | |
| Inferior fronto-occipital fascicle (IFOF) | |
| Inferior longitudinal fascicle (ILF) | |
| Superior longitudinal fascicle—Arcuate fascicle (SLF/AF) | |
| Uncinate fascicle (UF) |
Figure 2Schematic lateral and medial views of the superior longitudinal system (SLS) and its four different branches. A: anterior, P: posterior. Note that the schematic bundle views were derived from the diffusion tractography data of 42-year-old right-hander male participants of the BIL&GIN database (Mazoyer et al., 2016). Diffusion imaging and whole brain tractography have been detailed in De Benedictis et al. (2016). Briefly, fiber tracking was performed using particle-filter tractography with anatomical priors (Girard et al., 2014) and seeding initiated from the WM/GM interface (10 seeds/voxel). The different association bundles were therefore segmented manually with regions of interest (ROIs) based on the guidelines provided in previous studies (Zhang et al., 2010; Hau et al., 2016, 2017; Rojkova et al., 2016).
Figure 3Schematic lateral and medial views of the inferior longitudinal system (ILS), middle longitudinal system (MidLS), basal longitudinal system (BLS), mesial longitudinal system (MesLS), anterior transverse system (ATS) and posterior transverse system (PTS). A: anterior, P: posterior. See Figure 2 for details.
Figure 4Summary of the proposed nomenclature of the seven main systems of human WM association pathways. The schematic left lateral views of the different systems and sub-systems were derived from the same diffusion tractography data that in Figures 2, 3. See text for details about the terminology and its numbering.