| Literature DB >> 31245529 |
Rosanna K Olsen1,2, Valerie A Carr3, Ana M Daugherty4,5,6, Renaud La Joie7, Robert S C Amaral8, Katrin Amunts9,10,11, Jean C Augustinack12,13, Arnold Bakker14, Andrew R Bender15,16,17, David Berron18,19, Marina Boccardi20,21, Martina Bocchetta22, Alison C Burggren23, M Mallar Chakravarty8,24,25, Gaël Chételat26,27,28, Robin de Flores26,27, Jordan DeKraker29, Song-Lin Ding30, Mirjam I Geerlings31,32, Yushan Huang33, Ricardo Insausti34, Elliott G Johnson35, Prabesh Kanel36, Olga Kedo10, Kristen M Kennedy37, Attila Keresztes38,39, Joshua K Lee40,35, Ulman Lindenberger39,41, Susanne G Mueller42, Elizabeth M Mulligan43, Noa Ofen4,6,44, Daniela J Palombo45, Lorenzo Pasquini7, John Pluta46, Naftali Raz4,6,38, Karen M Rodrigue37, Margaret L Schlichting2, Yee Lee Shing38,47, Craig E L Stark48, Trevor A Steve49, Nanthia A Suthana50, Lei Wang51, Markus Werkle-Bergner38, Paul A Yushkevich52, Qijing Yu4,6, Laura E M Wisse52,53.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Heterogeneity of segmentation protocols for medial temporal lobe regions and hippocampal subfields on in vivo magnetic resonance imaging hinders the ability to integrate findings across studies. We aim to develop a harmonized protocol based on expert consensus and histological evidence.Entities:
Keywords: Cytoarchitecture; Hippocampus; Histology; Human; Neuroanatomy; Neuroimaging; Structural imaging; Volumetry; ex vivo
Year: 2019 PMID: 31245529 PMCID: PMC6581847 DOI: 10.1016/j.dadm.2019.04.001
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Alzheimers Dement (Amst) ISSN: 2352-8729
Fig. 1(A) Map highlighting the global membership of the HSG. Over 200 members from 18 countries are currently in the HSG. (B) Workflow procedure for the HSG. Abbreviations: HSG, Hippocampal Subfield Group.
Case descriptions and methods used for the anatomical labeling of the hippocampal body and head samples contributed to the HSG postmortem data set
| Case number (brain hemisphere) | Age/Sex | Neurological disease | Type of stain | Slice spacing | Origin | Annotations |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Hippocampal body | ||||||
| 1 (left) | 65/Male | None | Silver Stain | 2mm, 6 slices | Juelich | JA, OK, RI |
| 2 (right) | 60/Male | None | Nissl | 2mm, 6 slices | Massachusetts General Hospital | JA, OK, RI |
| 3 (left) | 75/Male | None | Kluver-Barrera | 2mm, 6 slices | University of Pennsylvania | JA, OK, RI |
| Hippocampal head | ||||||
| 1 (right) | 75/Male | None | Kluver-Barrera | 1mm, 14 slices | University of Pennsylvania | OK S-LD and RI |
| 2 (right) | 60/Male | AD | Kluver-Barrera | 1mm, 16 slices | University of Pennsylvania | OK S-LD and RI |
| 3 (left) | 80/Male | None | NeuN, PV, NPNFP, CB | 0.8 mm, 16 slices | Allen Institute | S-LD |
Abbreviations: AD, Alzheimer's disease; CB, antibody to calbindin-d28k; HSG, Hippocampal Subfield Group; JA, Jean Augustinack; NeuN, antibody to neuron-specific nuclear binding proteins; NPNFP, antibody to a nonphosphorylated site of the neurofilament triplet proteins; OK, Olga Kedo; PV, antibody to parvalbumin; RI, Ricardo Insausti; S-LD, Song-Lin Ding.
In progress.
Fig. 2(A) Examples of the variability in the position of the CA1, subiculum/prosubiculum boundary (white line) across three different segmentation protocols overlaid on the same brain (adapted from Yushkevich et al., 2015, Fig. 3). This variability is likely due to differences in reference atlases. (B) Histological and MRI slices of the human hippocampal formation depicting the body (upper) and head (lower) regions. Note that the subfield anatomy in the body and head differ in composition and organization relative to macroscopic features. Abbreviations: FD, fascia dentata (dentate gyrus); Ent, entorhinal cortex; JC, La Joie, Chetalat protocol; OAP, Olsen, Amaral, Palombo protocol; PreS, presubiculum; ProS, prosubiculum; Sub, subiculum; WG, Wisse, Geerlings protocol.
Fig. 3The same single histological slice of the hippocampal body stained with Kluver-Barrera stain, segmented by three different neuroanatomists. Abbreviations: DG/FD, dentate gyrus/fascia dentata; ProS, prosubiculum; PreS, presubiculum; PaS/ParaS, parasubiculum; S/Sub, subiculum.
Fig. 4Hippocampal head displaying the uncus in both hemispheres. (A2) Slice showing the disappearance of the uncus in the left hemisphere, and as such, the anterior-most slice of the hippocampal body in the left hemisphere. (B1) Final posterior slice of the hippocampal body displaying the colliculi, the crus fornix, and the “tear drop” shape of the hippocampal body. (B2) Colliculi are no longer visualized, and as such this slice is considered the first slice of the hippocampal tail. (C) Sagittal view, illustrating the anterior and posterior limits of the inclusive hippocampal body range. All images are T2-weighted, resolution 0.39 × 0.39 × 2 mm. (D) Screenshot from the online questionnaire used to reach consensus on the outer boundaries of the hippocampal body.
Example questions from the HSG questionnaire along with agreement responses obtained from the respondents
| Boundary | Question | Range | Mean (SD) | % Agree (>5) | binomial test ( |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Anterior | How clear is the boundary description? | 7-9 | 8.31 (0.76) | 100 | <0.001 |
| Anterior | Do you agree with the boundary rule? | 7-9 | 8.89 (0.41) | 100 | <0.001 |
| Posterior | How clear is the boundary description? | 6-9 | 7.93 (0.88) | 100 | <0.001 |
| Posterior | Do you agree with the boundary rule? | 5-9 | 8.48 (0.99) | 96.55 | <0.001 |
| Dorsal | How clear is the boundary description? | 5-9 | 8.10 (1.21) | 96.55 | <0.001 |
| Dorsal | Do you agree with part 1 of the boundary rule? | 5-9 | 8.31 (1.31) | 93.10 | <0.001 |
| Dorsal | Do you agree with part 2 of the boundary rule? | 3-9 | 8.35 (1.26) | 96.55 | <0.001 |
| Ventral | How clear is the boundary description? | 7-9 | 8.76 (0.51) | 100 | <0.001 |
| Ventral | Do you agree with the boundary rule? | 5-9 | 8.79 (0.78) | 96.55 | <0.001 |
| Medial | How clear is the boundary description? | 4-9 | 7.03 (1.70) | 72.41 | 0.004 |
| Medial | Do you agree with part 1 of the boundary rule? | 5-9 | 7.62 (1.50) | 82.76 | <0.001 |
| Medial | Do you agree with part 2 of the boundary rule? | 4-9 | 8.10 (1.45) | 89.66 | <0.001 |
| Lateral | How clear is the boundary description? | 5-9 | 8.66 (0.90) | 96.55 | <0.001 |
| Lateral | Do you agree with the boundary rule? | 6-9 | 8.62 (0.82) | 100 | <0.001 |
| Vessels | How clear is the boundary description? | 5-9 | 8.38 (0.98) | 96.55 | <0.001 |
| Vessels | Do you agree with the boundary rule? | 7-9 | 8.79 (0.56) | 100 | <0.001 |
| CSF/cysts | How clear is the boundary description? | 3-9 | 7.52 (1.66) | 89.66 | <0.001 |
| CSF/cysts | Do you agree with part 1 of the boundary rule? | 4-9 | 8.24 (1.41) | 89.66 | <0.001 |
| CSF/cysts | Do you agree with part 2 of the boundary rule? | 5-9 | 8.00 (1.31) | 89.66 | <0.001 |
| CSF/cysts | Do you agree with part 3 of the boundary rule? | 3-9 | 7.90 (1.65) | 86.21 | <0.001 |
Abbreviation: HSG, Hippocampal Subfield Group.