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White matter anatomy of the human deep brain revisited with high resolution DTI fibre tracking
Authors:Lemaire J-J  Cosnard G  Sakka L  Nuti C  Gradkowski W  Mori S  Hermoye L
Affiliation:a Service de neurochirurgie A, hôpital Gabriel-Montpied, CHU de Clermont-Ferrand, BP 69, 63003 Clermont-Ferrand cedex 1, France
b EA 3295, équipe de recherche en signal et imagerie médicale, Clermont université, université d’Auvergne, BP 10448, 63000 Clermont-Ferrand, France
c Diagnostic Radiology Unit, Saint-Luc University Hospital, université Catholique de Louvain, Brussels, Belgium
d Service de neurochirurgie, hôpital Bellevue, CHU de Saint-Étienne, 42055 Saint-Étienne, France
e Imagilys SPRL, Brussels, Belgium
f Department of Radiology and Radiological Science, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, Maryland
g F. M. Kirby Research Centre for Functional Brain Imaging, Kennedy Krieger Institute, Baltimore, Maryland
Abstract:

Background and Purpose

Deep white matter (WM) fascicles play a major, yet poorly understood, role in the overall connectivity of human brain. Better knowledge of their anatomy is requisite to understand the clinical correlates of their lesions and develop targeted treatments. We investigated whether MR-based diffusion tensor imaging (DTI) and fibre tracking could reveal in vivo, in explicit details, the 3D WM architecture within the subthalamic region and the internal capsule.

Methods

High-resolution DTI images were acquired on six healthy volunteers on a three Tesla MR scanner. We studied using single-subject analysis WM fascicles within the subthalamic region and the internal capsule, as follows: DTI deterministic fibre tracking (FT) of fascicles; embedding fascicles in the volume-rendered brain coupled with a triplanar view; rigorous anatomic labelling of each fascicle according to classical knowledge as described by pioneer neuroanatomists. Deterministic FT effects were taken into account.

Results

We charted most of WM fascicles of the deep brain, in particular large and complex fascicles such as the basal forebrain bundle and the ansa lenticularis. A topographic classification of subthalamic fascicles was proposed into three groups: the cerebellorubral, the reticulo-dorsal and the tegmento-peripheral one.

Conclusions

Beyond to demonstrate the feasibility of imaging the deepest WM fascicles in vivo, our results pave the way for a better understanding of the brain connectivity and for developing targeted neuromodulation.
Keywords:Connectivity   Deep brain   Diffusion tensor imaging   Fascicles   Fibre tracking   White matter
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