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Differential cortical microstructural maturation in the preterm human brain with diffusion kurtosis and tensor imaging

During the third trimester, the human brain undergoes rapid cellular and molecular processes that reshape the structural architecture of the cerebral cortex. Knowledge of cortical differentiation obtained predominantly from histological studies is limited in localized and small cortical regions. How...

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Published in:Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences - PNAS 2019-03, Vol.116 (10), p.4681-4688
Main Authors: Ouyang, Minhui, Jeon, Tina, Sotiras, Aristeidis, Peng, Qinmu, Mishra, Virendra, Halovanic, Cathy, Chen, Min, Chalak, Lina, Rollins, Nancy, Roberts, Timothy P. L., Davatzikos, Christos, Huang, Hao
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creator Ouyang, Minhui
Jeon, Tina
Sotiras, Aristeidis
Peng, Qinmu
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Halovanic, Cathy
Chen, Min
Chalak, Lina
Rollins, Nancy
Roberts, Timothy P. L.
Davatzikos, Christos
Huang, Hao
description During the third trimester, the human brain undergoes rapid cellular and molecular processes that reshape the structural architecture of the cerebral cortex. Knowledge of cortical differentiation obtained predominantly from histological studies is limited in localized and small cortical regions. How cortical microstructure is differentiated across cortical regions in this critical period is unknown. In this study, the cortical microstructural architecture across the entire cortex was delineated with non-Gaussian diffusion kurtosis imaging as well as conventional diffusion tensor imaging of 89 preterm neonates aged 31–42 postmenstrual weeks. The temporal changes of corticalmean kurtosis (MK) or fractional anisotropy (FA) were heterogeneous across the cortical regions. Cortical MK decreases were observed throughout the studied age period, while cortical FA decrease reached its plateau around 37 weeks. More rapid decreases in MK were found in the primary visual region, while faster FA declines were observed in the prefrontal cortex. We found that distinctive cortical microstructural changes were coupled with microstructural maturation of associated white matter tracts. Both cortical MK and FA measurements predicted the postmenstrual age of preterm infants accurately. This study revealed a differential 4D spatiotemporal cytoarchitectural signature inferred by non-Gaussian diffusion barriers inside the cortical plate during the third trimester. The cytoarchitectural processes, including dendritic arborization and neuronal density decreases, were inferred by regional cortical FA and MK measurements. The presented findings suggest that cortical MK and FA measurements could be used as effective imaging markers for cortical microstructural changes in typical and potentially atypical brain development.
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subjects Anisotropy
Architecture
Biological Sciences
Brain
Brain - anatomy & histology
Brain - diagnostic imaging
Brain - growth & development
Brain - physiology
Brain architecture
Cellular structure
Cerebral cortex
Cortex (temporal)
Critical period
Dendritic branching
Diffusion barriers
Diffusion Tensor Imaging
Female
Humans
Imaging
Infant
Infant, Newborn
Infant, Premature - growth & development
Infants
Kurtosis
Magnetic resonance imaging
Male
Mathematical analysis
Maturation
Microstructure
Neonates
Neuroimaging
PNAS Plus
Prefrontal cortex
Substantia alba
Tensors
Visual cortex
Visual observation
title Differential cortical microstructural maturation in the preterm human brain with diffusion kurtosis and tensor imaging
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