Considerations and recommendations from the ISMRM diffusion study group for preclinical diffusion MRI: Part 1: In vivo small-animal imaging.

Details

Serval ID
serval:BIB_7D54D697DFE6
Type
Article: article from journal or magazin.
Collection
Publications
Institution
Title
Considerations and recommendations from the ISMRM diffusion study group for preclinical diffusion MRI: Part 1: In vivo small-animal imaging.
Journal
Magnetic resonance in medicine
Author(s)
Jelescu I.O., Grussu F., Ianus A., Hansen B., Barrett RLC, Aggarwal M., Michielse S., Nasrallah F., Syeda W., Wang N., Veraart J., Roebroeck A., Bagdasarian A.F., Eichner C., Sepehrband F., Zimmermann J., Soustelle L., Bowman C., Tendler B.C., Hertanu A., Jeurissen B., Verhoye M., Frydman L., van de Looij Y., Hike D., Dunn J.F., Miller K., Landman B.A., Shemesh N., Anderson A., McKinnon E., Farquharson S., Dell'Acqua F., Pierpaoli C., Drobnjak I., Leemans A., Harkins K.D., Descoteaux M., Xu D., Huang H., Santin M.D., Grant S.C., Obenaus A., Kim G.S., Wu D., Le Bihan D., Blackband S.J., Ciobanu L., Fieremans E., Bai R., Leergaard T.B., Zhang J., Dyrby T.B., Johnson G.A., Cohen-Adad J., Budde M.D., Schilling K.G.
ISSN
1522-2594 (Electronic)
ISSN-L
0740-3194
Publication state
Published
Issued date
06/2025
Peer-reviewed
Oui
Volume
93
Number
6
Pages
2507-2534
Language
english
Notes
Publication types: Journal Article ; Review
Publication Status: ppublish
Abstract
Small-animal diffusion MRI (dMRI) has been used for methodological development and validation, characterizing the biological basis of diffusion phenomena, and comparative anatomy. The steps from animal setup and monitoring, to acquisition, analysis, and interpretation are complex, with many decisions that may ultimately affect what questions can be answered using the resultant data. This work aims to present selected considerations and recommendations from the diffusion community on best practices for preclinical dMRI of in vivo animals. We describe the general considerations and foundational knowledge that must be considered when designing experiments. We briefly describe differences in animal species and disease models and discuss why some may be more or less appropriate for different studies. We, then, give recommendations for in vivo acquisition protocols, including decisions on hardware, animal preparation, and imaging sequences, followed by advice for data processing including preprocessing, model-fitting, and tractography. Finally, we provide an online resource that lists publicly available preclinical dMRI datasets and software packages to promote responsible and reproducible research. In each section, we attempt to provide guides and recommendations, but also highlight areas for which no guidelines exist (and why), and where future work should focus. Although we mainly cover the central nervous system (on which most preclinical dMRI studies are focused), we also provide, where possible and applicable, recommendations for other organs of interest. An overarching goal is to enhance the rigor and reproducibility of small animal dMRI acquisitions and analyses, and thereby advance biomedical knowledge.
Keywords
Animals, Diffusion Magnetic Resonance Imaging/methods, Image Processing, Computer-Assisted/methods, Brain/diagnostic imaging, Software, Mice, Reproducibility of Results, acquisition, best practices, diffusion MRI, diffusion tensor, microstructure, open science, preclinical, processing, small animal, tractography
Pubmed
Web of science
Open Access
Yes
Create date
28/02/2025 16:06
Last modification date
17/04/2025 7:09
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