In Vivo Super-Resolution Track-Density Imaging for Thalamic Nuclei Identification

Author:

Basile Gianpaolo Antonio1,Bertino Salvatore1,Bramanti Alessia2,Ciurleo Rosella3,Anastasi Giuseppe Pio1,Milardi Demetrio1,Cacciola Alberto1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Brain Mapping Lab, Department of Biomedical, Dental Sciences and Morphological and Functional Images, University of Messina, 98124 Messina, Italy

2. Department of Medicine, Surgery and Dentistry “Medical School of Salerno”, University of Salerno, 84084 Baronissi, Italy

3. IRCCS Centro Neurolesi “Bonino Pulejo”, 98124 Messina, Italy

Abstract

Abstract The development of novel techniques for the in vivo, non-invasive visualization and identification of thalamic nuclei has represented a major challenge for human neuroimaging research in the last decades. Thalamic nuclei have important implications in various key aspects of brain physiology and many of them show selective alterations in various neurologic and psychiatric disorders. In addition, both surgical stimulation and ablation of specific thalamic nuclei have been proven to be useful for the treatment of different neuropsychiatric diseases. The present work aimed at describing a novel protocol for histologically guided delineation of thalamic nuclei based on short-tracks track-density imaging (stTDI), which is an advanced imaging technique exploiting high angular resolution diffusion tractography to obtain super-resolved white matter maps. We demonstrated that this approach can identify up to 13 distinct thalamic nuclei bilaterally with very high inter-subject (ICC: 0.996, 95% CI: 0.993–0.998) and inter-rater (ICC:0.981; 95% CI:0.963–0.989) reliability, and that both subject-based and group-level thalamic parcellation show a fair share of similarity to a recent standard-space histological thalamic atlas. Finally, we showed that stTDI-derived thalamic maps can be successfully employed to study structural and functional connectivity of the thalamus and may have potential implications both for basic and translational research, as well as for presurgical planning purposes.

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience,Cognitive Neuroscience

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