Age-Specific Adult Rat Brain MRI Templates and Tissue Probability Maps

Details

Serval ID
serval:BIB_02463087D3C6
Type
Autre: use this type when nothing else fits.
Collection
Publications
Institution
Title
Age-Specific Adult Rat Brain MRI Templates and Tissue Probability Maps
Author(s)
MacNicol Eilidh, Wright Paul, Kim Eugene, Brusini Irene, Esteban Oscar, Simmons Camilla, Turkheimer Federico E., Cash Diana
ISSN
1662-5196
ISSN-L
1662-5196
Issued date
07/01/2022
Language
english
Notes
Publication types: Journal Article
Publication Status: epublish
Abstract
Age-specific resources in human MRI mitigate processing biases that arise from structural changes across the lifespan. There are fewer age-specific resources for preclinical imaging, and they only represent developmental periods rather than adulthood. Since rats recapitulate many facets of human aging, it was hypothesized that brain volume and each tissue's relative contribution to total brain volume would change with age in the adult rat. Data from a longitudinal study of rats at 3, 5, 11, and 17 months old were used to test this hypothesis. Tissue volume was estimated from high resolution structural images using a priori information from tissue probability maps. However, existing tissue probability maps generated inaccurate gray matter probabilities in subcortical structures, particularly the thalamus. To address this issue, gray matter, white matter, and CSF tissue probability maps were generated by combining anatomical and signal intensity information. The effects of age on volumetric estimations were then assessed with mixed-effects models. Results showed that herein estimation of gray matter volumes better matched histological evidence, as compared to existing resources. All tissue volumes increased with age, and the tissue proportions relative to total brain volume varied across adulthood. Consequently, a set of rat brain templates and tissue probability maps from across the adult lifespan is released to expand the preclinical MRI community's fundamental resources.
Keywords
Computer Science Applications, Biomedical Engineering, Neuroscience (miscellaneous)
Pubmed
Web of science
Open Access
Yes
Funding(s)
Swiss National Science Foundation / Careers / 185872
Create date
16/09/2021 13:51
Last modification date
18/08/2023 5:57
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