keyword
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38553518/the-longitudinal-volumetric-and-shape-changes-of-subcortical-nuclei-in-parkinson-s-disease
#21
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Wenyi Yang, Xueqin Bai, Xiaojun Guan, Cheng Zhou, Tao Guo, Jingjing Wu, Xiaojun Xu, Minming Zhang, Baorong Zhang, Jiali Pu, Jun Tian
Brain structural changes in Parkinson's disease (PD) are progressive throughout the disease course. Changes in surface morphology with disease progression remain unclear. This study aimed to assess the volumetric and shape changes of the subcortical nuclei during disease progression and explore their association with clinical symptoms. Thirty-four patients and 32 healthy controls were enrolled. The global volume and shape of the subcortical nuclei were compared between patients and controls at baseline. The volume and shape changes of the subcortical nuclei were also explored between baseline and 2 years of follow-up...
March 29, 2024: Scientific Reports
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38552916/cortical-morphology-variations-during-the-menstrual-cycle-in-individuals-with-and-without-premenstrual-dysphoric-disorder
#22
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Manon Dubol, Louise Stiernman, Inger Sundström-Poromaa, Marie Bixo, Erika Comasco
BACKGROUND: Premenstrual dysphoric disorder (PMDD) is hypothesized to stem from maladaptive neural sensitivity to ovarian steroid hormone fluctuations. Recently, we found thinner cortices in individuals with PMDD, compared to healthy controls, during the symptomatic phase. Here, we aimed at investigating whether such differences illustrate state-like characteristics specific to the symptomatic phase, or trait-like features defining PMDD. METHODS: Patients and controls were scanned using structural magnetic resonance imaging during the mid-follicular and late-luteal phase of the menstrual cycle...
March 27, 2024: Journal of Affective Disorders
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38545072/the-impact-of-paramagnetic-rim-lesions-on-cortical-thickness-and-gray-to-white-matter-contrast-in-relapsing-remitting-multiple-sclerosis
#23
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Yan Xie, Yihao Yao, Nanxi Shen, Yuanhao Li, Hongquan Zhu, Jun Lu, Dong Liu, Yujie Ding, Yan Zhang, Wenzhen Zhu
BACKGROUND: Paramagnetic rim lesions (PRLs) on susceptibility magnetic resonance sequences have been suggested as an imaging marker of disease progression in multiple sclerosis. This retrospective cross-sectional study aimed to investigate the impact of PRLs on cortical thickness and gray matter (GM) to white matter (WM) contrast in relapsing-remitting multiple sclerosis (RRMS). METHODS: A total of 82 RRMS patients (40 patients with at least 1 PRL and 42 patients without PRL) and 43 healthy controls (HC) were included in this study...
March 15, 2024: Quantitative Imaging in Medicine and Surgery
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38544425/the-superior-frontal-sulcus-in-the-human-brain-morphology-and-probability-maps
#24
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Kristina Drudik, Michael Petrides
The superior frontal sulcus (SFS) is the major sulcus on the dorsolateral frontal cortex that defines the lateral limit of the superior frontal gyrus. Caudally, it originates near the superior precentral sulcus (SPRS) and, rostrally, it terminates near the frontal pole. The advent of structural neuroimaging has demonstrated significant variability in this sulcus that is not captured by the classic sulcal maps. The present investigation examined the morphological variability of the SFS in 50 individual magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) scans of the human brain that were registered to the Montreal Neurological Institute (MNI) standard stereotaxic space...
April 2024: Human Brain Mapping
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38532189/encephalitis-like-episodes-with-cortical-edema-and-enhancement-in-patients-with-neuronal-intranuclear-inclusion-disease
#25
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Yu Shen, Kaiyan Jiang, Hanlin Liang, Ying Xiong, Ziwei Song, Bo Wang, Min Zhu, Yusen Qiu, Dandan Tan, Chengsi Wu, Jianwen Deng, Zhaoxia Wang, Daojun Hong
OBJECTIVES: Neuronal intranuclear inclusion disease (NIID) exhibited significant clinical heterogeneities. However, the clinical features, radiographic changes, and prognosis of patients with encephalitis-like NIID have yet to be systematically elucidated. METHODS: Clinical data including medical history, physical examination, and laboratory examinations were collected and analyzed. Skin and sural nerve biopsies were conducted on the patient. Repeat-primed PCR (RP-PCR) and fluorescence amplicon length PCR (AL-PCR) were used to detect the expansion of CGG repeat...
March 26, 2024: Neurological Sciences
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38526486/trends-in-intracranial-and-cerebral-volumes-of-framingham-heart-study-participants-born-1930-to-1970
#26
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Charles DeCarli, Pauline Maillard, Matthew P Pase, Alexa S Beiser, Daniel Kojis, Claudia L Satizabal, Jayandra J Himali, Hugo J Aparicio, Evan Fletcher, Sudha Seshadri
IMPORTANCE: Human brain development and maintenance is under both genetic and environmental influences that likely affect later-life dementia risk. OBJECTIVE: To examine environmental influences by testing whether time-dependent secular differences occurred in cranial and brain volumes and cortical thickness over birth decades spanning 1930 to 1970. DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS: This cross-sectional study used data from the community-based Framingham Heart Study cohort for participants born in the decades 1930 to 1970...
March 25, 2024: JAMA Neurology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38526330/altered-brain-morphology-and-functional-connectivity-in-postmenopausal-women-automatic-segmentation-of-whole-brain-and-thalamic-subnuclei-and-resting-state-fmri
#27
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Gwang-Won Kim, Kwangsung Park, Yun-Hyeon Kim, Gwang-Woo Jeong
The transition to menopause is associated with various physiological changes, including alterations in brain structure and function. However, menopause-related structural and functional changes are poorly understood. The purpose of this study was not only to compare the brain volume changes between premenopausal and postmenopausal women, but also to evaluate the functional connectivity between the targeted brain regions associated with structural atrophy in postmenopausal women. Each 21 premenopausal and postmenopausal women underwent magnetic resonance imaging (MRI)...
March 23, 2024: Aging
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38519887/association-of-in-utero-hiv-exposure-with-child-brain-structure-and-language-development-a-south-african-birth-cohort-study
#28
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Catherine J Wedderburn, Shunmay Yeung, Sivenesi Subramoney, Jean-Paul Fouche, Shantanu H Joshi, Katherine L Narr, Andrea M Rehman, Annerine Roos, Diana M Gibb, Heather J Zar, Dan J Stein, Kirsten A Donald
BACKGROUND: There is a growing population of children with in utero HIV exposure who are at risk of poor neurodevelopmental outcomes despite avoiding HIV infection. However, the underlying neurobiological pathways are not understood and neuroimaging studies are lacking. We aimed to investigate the cortical brain structure of children who are HIV-exposed and uninfected (HEU) compared to HIV-unexposed (HU) children and to examine the relationship with neurodevelopment. METHODS: The Drakenstein Child Health birth cohort study enrolled pregnant women from a high HIV prevalence area in South Africa with longitudinal follow-up of mother-child pairs...
March 22, 2024: BMC Medicine
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38517610/deep-learning-based-3d-cerebrovascular-segmentation-workflow-on-bright-and-black-blood-sequences-magnetic-resonance-angiography
#29
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Langtao Zhou, Huiting Wu, Guanghua Luo, Hong Zhou
BACKGROUND: Cerebrovascular diseases have emerged as significant threats to human life and health. Effectively segmenting brain blood vessels has become a crucial scientific challenge. We aimed to develop a fully automated deep learning workflow that achieves accurate 3D segmentation of cerebral blood vessels by incorporating classic convolutional neural networks (CNNs) and transformer models. METHODS: We used a public cerebrovascular segmentation dataset (CSD) containing 45 volumes of 1...
March 22, 2024: Insights Into Imaging
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38516845/intracerebral-hemorrhage-induced-brain-injury-in-mice-the-role-of-peroxiredoxin-2-toll-like-receptor-4-inflammatory-axis
#30
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Yang Du, Jinjin Wang, Jia Zhang, Ning Li, Guangshuo Li, Xinmin Liu, Yijun Lin, Dandan Wang, Kaijiang Kang, Liheng Bian, Xingquan Zhao
BACKGROUND: Peroxiredoxin 2 (Prx2), an intracellular protein that regulates redox reactions, released from red blood cells is involved in inflammatory brain injury after intracerebral hemorrhage (ICH). Toll-like receptor 4 (TLR4) may be crucial in this process. This study investigated the role of the Prx2-TLR4 inflammatory axis in brain injury following experimental ICH in mice. METHODS: First, C57BL/6 mice received an intracaudate injection of autologous arterial blood or saline and their brains were harvested on day 1 to measure Prx2 levels...
March 2024: CNS Neuroscience & Therapeutics
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38514120/-a-new-preoperative-simulation-using-magnetic-resonance-imaging-bone-like-imaging-with-zero-echo-time-sequence
#31
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Akihiro Inoue, Yasuhiro Shiraishi, Taichi Furumochi, Takeharu Kunieda
This study aimed to evaluate the clinical usefulness of zero-echo time(ZTE)-based magnetic resonance imaging(MRI)in planning an optimal surgical approach and applying ZTE for anatomical guidance during transcranial surgery. P atients who underwent transcranial surgery and carotid endarterectomy and for whom ZTE-based MRI and magnetic resonance angiography(MRA)data were obtained, were analyzed by creating ZTE/MRA fusion images and 3D-ZTE-based MRI models. We examined whether these images and models could be substituted for computed tomography imaging during neurosurgical procedures...
March 2024: No Shinkei Geka. Neurological Surgery
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38510580/cortical-microstructural-involvement-in-cerebral-small-vessel-disease
#32
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Annemarie Reiländer, Marlene Engel, Ulrike Nöth, Ralf Deichmann, Manoj Shrestha, Marlies Wagner, René-Maxime Gracien, Alexander Seiler
BACKGROUND: In cerebral small vessel disease (CSVD), cortical atrophy occurs at a later stage compared to microstructural abnormalities and therefore cannot be used for monitoring short-term disease progression. We aimed to investigate whether cortical diffusion tensor imaging (DTI) and quantitative (q) magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) are able to detect early microstructural involvement of the cerebral cortex in CSVD. MATERIALS AND METHODS: 33 CSVD patients without significant cortical or whole-brain atrophy and 16 healthy control subjects were included and underwent structural MRI, DTI and high-resolution qMRI with T2 , T2 * and T2' mapping at 3 T as well as comprehensive cognitive assessment...
2024: Cerebral circulation—cognition and behavior
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38500570/fasst-filtering-via-symmetric-autoencoder-for-spherical-superficial-white-matter-tractography
#33
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Yuan Li, Xinyu Nie, Yao Fu, Yonggang Shi
Superficial white matter (SWM) plays an important role in functioning of the human brain, and it contains a large amount of cortico-cortical connections. However, the difficulties of generating complete and reliable U-fibers make SWM-related analysis lag behind relatively matured Deep white matter (DWM) analysis. With the aid of some newly proposed surface-based SWM tractography algorithms, we have developed a specialized SWM filtering method based on a symmetric variational autoencoder (VAE). In this work, we first demonstrate the advantage of the spherical representation and generate these spherical tracts using the triangular mesh and the registered spherical surface...
October 2023: Comput Diffus MRI
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38496633/subtypes-of-brain-change-in-aging-and-their-associations-with-cognition-and-alzheimer-s-disease-biomarkers
#34
Elettra Capogna, Øystein Sørensen, Leiv Otto Watne, James Roe, Marie Strømstad, Ane Victoria Idland, Nathalie Bodd Halaas, Kaj Blennow, Henrik Zetterberg, Kristine Beate Walhovd, Anders Martin Fjell, Didac Vidal-Piñeiro
Structural brain changes underly cognitive changes in older age and contribute to inter-individual variability in cognition. Here, we assessed how changes in cortical thickness, surface area, and subcortical volume, are related to cognitive change in cognitively unimpaired older adults using structural magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) data-driven clustering. Specifically, we tested (1) which brain structural changes over time predict cognitive change in older age (2) whether these are associated with core cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) Alzheimer's disease (AD) biomarkers phosphorylated tau (p-tau) and amyloid-β (Aβ42), and (3) the degree of overlap between clusters derived from different structural features...
March 7, 2024: bioRxiv
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38496405/development-of-an-mri-compatible-robotic-perturbation-system-for-studying-the-task-dependent-contribution-of-the-brainstem-to-long-latency-responses
#35
Rebecca C Nikonowicz, Fabrizio Sergi
Methodological constraints have hindered direct in vivo measurement of reticulospinal tract (RST) function. The RST is thought to contribute to the increase in the amplitude of a long latency response (LLR), a stereotypical response evoked in stretched muscles, that arises when participants are asked to "resist" a perturbation. Thus, functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) during robot-evoked LLRs under different task goals may be a method to measure motor-related RST function. We have developed the Dual Motor StretchWrist (DMSW), a new MR-compatible robotic perturbation system, and validated its functionality via experiments that used surface electromyography (sEMG) and fMRI...
March 5, 2024: bioRxiv
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38495338/the-impact-of-quality-control-on-cortical-morphometry-comparisons-in-autism
#36
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Saashi A Bedford, Alfredo Ortiz-Rosa, Jenna M Schabdach, Manuela Costantino, Stephanie Tullo, Tom Piercy, Meng-Chuan Lai, Michael V Lombardo, Adriana Di Martino, Gabriel A Devenyi, M Mallar Chakravarty, Aaron F Alexander-Bloch, Jakob Seidlitz, Simon Baron-Cohen, Richard A I Bethlehem
Structural magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) quality is known to impact and bias neuroanatomical estimates and downstream analysis, including case-control comparisons, and a growing body of work has demonstrated the importance of careful quality control (QC) and evaluated the impact of image and image-processing quality. However, the growing size of typical neuroimaging datasets presents an additional challenge to QC, which is typically extremely time and labour intensive. One of the most important aspects of MRI quality is the accuracy of processed outputs, which have been shown to impact estimated neurodevelopmental trajectories...
October 1, 2023: Imaging Neurosci (Camb)
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38492127/updates-to-the-melbourne-children-s-regional-infant-brain-software-package-m-crib-s
#37
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Chris L Adamson, Bonnie Alexander, Claire E Kelly, Gareth Ball, Richard Beare, Jeanie L Y Cheong, Alicia J Spittle, Lex W Doyle, Peter J Anderson, Marc L Seal, Deanne K Thompson
The delineation of cortical areas on magnetic resonance images (MRI) is important for understanding the complexities of the developing human brain. The previous version of the Melbourne Children's Regional Infant Brain (M-CRIB-S) (Adamson et al. Scientific Reports, 10(1), 10, 2020) is a software package that performs whole-brain segmentation, cortical surface extraction and parcellation of the neonatal brain. Available cortical parcellation schemes in the M-CRIB-S are the adult-compatible 34- and 31-region per hemisphere Desikan-Killiany (DK) and Desikan-Killiany-Tourville (DKT), respectively...
March 16, 2024: Neuroinformatics
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38486948/parental-education-and-income-are-linked-to-offspring-cortical-brain-structure-and-psychopathology-at-9-11%C3%A2-years
#38
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Linn B Norbom, Jaroslav Rokicki, Espen M Eilertsen, Thea Wiker, Jamie Hanson, Andreas Dahl, Dag Alnæs, Sara Fernández-Cabello, Dani Beck, Ingrid Agartz, Ole A Andreassen, Lars T Westlye, Christian K Tamnes
BACKGROUND: A child's socioeconomic environment can shape central aspects of their life, including vulnerability to mental disorders. Negative environmental influences in youth may interfere with the extensive and dynamic brain development occurring at this time. Indeed, there are numerous yet diverging reports of associations between parental socioeconomic status (SES) and child cortical brain morphometry. Most of these studies have used single metric- or unimodal analyses of standard cortical morphometry that downplay the probable scenario where numerous biological pathways in sum account for SES-related cortical differences in youth...
March 2024: JCPP Adv
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38486858/improve-the-diagnosis-of-idiopathic-normal-pressure-hydrocephalus-by-combining-abnormal-cortical-thickness-and-ventricular-morphometry
#39
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Yifeng Yang, Meijing Yan, Xiao Liu, Shihong Li, Guangwu Lin
BACKGROUND: The primary imaging markers for idiopathic Normal Pressure Hydrocephalus (iNPH) emphasize morphological measurements within the ventricular system, with no attention given to alterations in brain parenchyma. This study aimed to investigate the potential effectiveness of combining ventricular morphometry and cortical structural measurements as diagnostic biomarkers for iNPH. METHODS: A total of 57 iNPH patients and 55 age-matched healthy controls (HC) were recruited in this study...
2024: Frontiers in Aging Neuroscience
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38478052/altered-functional-structural-coupling-may-predict-parkinson-s-patient-s-depression
#40
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Min Wang, Changlian Tan, Qin Shen, Sainan Cai, Qinru Liu, Haiyan Liao
We aimed to elucidate the neurobiological basis of depression in Parkinson's disease and identify potential imaging markers for depression in patients with Parkinson's disease. We recruited 43 normal controls (NC), 46 depressed Parkinson's disease patients (DPD) and 56 non-depressed Parkinson's disease (NDPD). All participants underwent routine T2-weighted, T2Flair, and resting-state scans on the same 3.0 T magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) scanner at our hospital. Pre-processing includes calculating surface-based Regional Homogeneity (2DReHo) and cortical thickness...
March 13, 2024: Brain Structure & Function
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