Volumetric analysis of age- and sex-related changes in the corpus striatum and thalamus in the 1–18 age group: a retrospective magnetic resonance imaging study

Author:

Işıklar Sefa12ORCID,Sağlam Dilek34ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Medical Imaging Techniques Program , Vocational School of Health Services, , Bursa 16059 , Turkey

2. Bursa Uludag University , Vocational School of Health Services, , Bursa 16059 , Turkey

3. Department of Radiology , Faculty of Medicine, , Bursa 16059 , Turkey

4. Bursa Uludag University , Faculty of Medicine, , Bursa 16059 , Turkey

Abstract

Abstract Studies of the development and asymmetry of the corpus striatum and thalamus in early childhood are rare. Studies investigating these structures across the lifespan have not presented their changes during childhood and adolescence in detail. For these reasons, this study investigated the effect of age and sex factors on the development and asymmetry of the corpus striatum and thalamus in the 1–18 age group. In this retrospective study, we included 652 individuals [362 (56%) males] aged 1–18 years with normal brain MRI between 2012 and 2021. Absolute and relative volumes of the corpus striatum and thalamus were obtained by segmentation of three-dimensional T1-weighted MRIs with volBrain1.0. We created age-specific volume data and month-based development models with the help of SPSS (ver.28). The corpus striatum and thalamus had cubic absolute volumetric developmental models. The relative volume of the caudate and thalamus (only males) is consistent with the decreasing “growth” model, the others with the decreasing cubic model. The absolute volumes of the males’ bilateral corpus striatum and thalamus and the relative volumes of the caudate and thalamus of the females were significantly larger (P < 0.05). The caudate showed right > left lateralization; putamen, globus pallidus, and thalamus showed left > right lateralization.

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Reference46 articles.

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