Literature DB >> 34461233

Ventral intermediate nucleus structural connectivity-derived segmentation: anatomical reliability and variability.

Salvatore Bertino1, Gianpaolo Antonio Basile1, Alessia Bramanti2, Rosella Ciurleo2, Adriana Tisano3, Giuseppe Pio Anastasi1, Demetrio Milardi1, Alberto Cacciola4.   

Abstract

The Ventral intermediate nucleus (Vim) of thalamus is the most targeted structure for the treatment of drug-refractory tremors. Since methodological differences across existing studies are remarkable and no gold-standard pipeline is available, in this study, we tested different parcellation pipelines for tractography-derived putative Vim identification. Thalamic parcellation was performed on a high quality, multi-shell dataset and a downsampled, clinical-like dataset using two different diffusion signal modeling techniques and two different voxel classification criteria, thus implementing a total of four parcellation pipelines. The most reliable pipeline in terms of inter-subject variability has been picked and parcels putatively corresponding to motor thalamic nuclei have been selected by calculating similarity with a histology-based mask of Vim. Then, spatial relations with optimal stimulation points for the treatment of essential tremor have been quantified. Finally, effect of data quality and parcellation pipelines on a volumetric index of connectivity clusters has been assessed. We found that the pipeline characterized by higher-order signal modeling and threshold-based voxel classification criteria was the most reliable in terms of inter-subject variability regardless data quality. The maps putatively corresponding to Vim were those derived by precentral and dentate nucleus-thalamic connectivity. However, tractography-derived functional targets showed remarkable differences in shape and sizes when compared to a ground truth model based on histochemical staining on seriate sections of human brain. Thalamic voxels connected to contralateral dentate nucleus resulted to be the closest to literature-derived stimulation points for essential tremor but at the same time showing the most remarkable inter-subject variability. Finally, the volume of connectivity parcels resulted to be significantly influenced by data quality and parcellation pipelines. Hence, caution is warranted when performing thalamic connectivity-based segmentation for stereotactic targeting.
Copyright © 2021. Published by Elsevier Inc.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Cerebellum; Cerebral cortex; Thalamus; Tractography; dMRI

Mesh:

Year:  2021        PMID: 34461233     DOI: 10.1016/j.neuroimage.2021.118519

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Neuroimage        ISSN: 1053-8119            Impact factor:   6.556


  1 in total

1.  In vivo probabilistic atlas of white matter tracts of the human subthalamic area combining track density imaging and optimized diffusion tractography.

Authors:  Gianpaolo Antonio Basile; Marina Quartu; Salvatore Bertino; Maria Pina Serra; Marcello Trucas; Marianna Boi; Roberto Demontis; Alessia Bramanti; Giuseppe Pio Anastasi; Demetrio Milardi; Rosella Ciurleo; Alberto Cacciola
Journal:  Brain Struct Funct       Date:  2022-09-17       Impact factor: 3.748

  1 in total

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