Authors
Hao Huang, Jiangyang Zhang, Setsu Wakana, Weihong Zhang, Tianbo Ren, Linda J Richards, Paul Yarowsky, Pamela Donohue, Ernest Graham, Peter CM van Zijl, Susumu Mori
Publication date
2006/10/15
Journal
Neuroimage
Volume
33
Issue
1
Pages
27-38
Publisher
Academic Press
Description
Brain anatomy is characterized by dramatic growth from the end of the second trimester through the neonatal stage. The characterization of normal axonal growth of the white matter tracts has not been well-documented to date and could provide important clues to understanding the extensive inhomogeneity of white matter injuries in cerebral palsy (CP) patients. However, anatomical studies of human brain development during this period are surprisingly scarce and histology-based atlases have become available only recently. Diffusion tensor magnetic resonance imaging (DTMRI) can reveal detailed anatomy of white matter. We acquired diffusion tensor images (DTI) of postmortem fetal brain samples and in vivo neonates and children. Neural structures were annotated in two-dimensional (2D) slices, segmented, measured, and reconstructed three-dimensionally (3D). The growth status of various white matter tracts …
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