| Literature DB >> 32066734 |
Deepthi Rajashekar1,2, Matthias Wilms3, M Ethan MacDonald3,4, Jan Ehrhardt5, Pauline Mouches6,3, Richard Frayne7,8, Michael D Hill3,9, Nils D Forkert3,9.
Abstract
Normative brain atlases are a standard tool for neuroscience research and are, for example, used for spatial normalization of image datasets prior to voxel-based analyses of brain morphology and function. Although many different atlases are publicly available, they are usually biased with respect to an imaging modality and the age distribution. Both effects are well known to negatively impact the accuracy and reliability of the spatial normalization process using non-linear image registration methods. An important and very active neuroscience area that lacks appropriate atlases is lesion-related research in elderly populations (e.g. stroke, multiple sclerosis) for which FLAIR MRI and non-contrast CT are often the clinical imaging modalities of choice. To overcome the lack of atlases for these tasks and modalities, this paper presents high-resolution, age-specific FLAIR and non-contrast CT atlases of the elderly generated using clinical images.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32066734 PMCID: PMC7026039 DOI: 10.1038/s41597-020-0379-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Data ISSN: 2052-4463 Impact factor: 6.444
Fig. 1Processing pipeline for generating high-resolution FLAIR and NCCT atlases.
Fig. 2Effect of registration-based interpolation. (a) a sample dataset; (b) corresponding dataset after registration-based interpolation.
Fig. 3Atlas generation. (a) sample NCCT with large ventricles; (b) sample NCCT with small ventricles; (c) MIPLAB-NCCT atlas; (d) sample FLAIR with large ventricles; (e) sample FLAIR with small ventricles; (f) MIPLAB-FLAIR atlas.
Summary of the characteristics of the MIPLAB atlases in comparison with atlases previously published.
| Atlas | Age (mean ± std) | Sample Size | Entropy |
|---|---|---|---|
| Brainder-FLAIR | 48.4 ± 14.81 | 853 | 2.29 |
| MIPLAB-FLAIR | 65.9 ± 13.05 | 136 | 1.45 |
| MIPLAB-NCCT | 71.9 ± 14.04 | 47 | 1.55 |
Fig. 4The MIPLAB atlases revealing relatively more detail in boundary regions. (a) Brainder-FLAIR atlas; (b) MIPLAB-FLAIR atlas; (c) MIPLAB-NCCT atlas.
| Measurement(s) | neuroimaging measurement • Brain group average • Elderly |
| Technology Type(s) | Computed Tomography of the Brain without Contrast • Fluid Attenuated Inversion Recovery • Image Registration |
| Sample Characteristic - Organism | Homo sapiens |