Publication Type Academic Article
Authors Butler T, Zaborszky L, Pirraglia E, Li J, Wang X, Li Y, Tsui W, Talos D, Devinsky O, Kuchna I, Nowicki K, French J, Kuzniecky R, Wegiel J, Glodzik L, Rusinek H, deLeon M, Thesen T
Journal Neuroimage
Volume 97
Pagination 245-51
Date Published 04/13/2014
ISSN 1095-9572
Keywords Image Processing, Computer-Assisted, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Septal Nuclei
Abstract Septal nuclei, located in basal forebrain, are strongly connected with hippocampi and important in learning and memory, but have received limited research attention in human MRI studies. While probabilistic maps for estimating septal volume on MRI are now available, they have not been independently validated against manual tracing of MRI, typically considered the gold standard for delineating brain structures. We developed a protocol for manual tracing of the human septal region on MRI based on examination of neuroanatomical specimens. We applied this tracing protocol to T1 MRI scans (n=86) from subjects with temporal epilepsy and healthy controls to measure septal volume. To assess the inter-rater reliability of the protocol, a second tracer used the same protocol on 20 scans that were randomly selected from the 72 healthy controls. In addition to measuring septal volume, maximum septal thickness between the ventricles was measured and recorded. The same scans (n=86) were also analyzed using septal probabilistic maps and DARTEL toolbox in SPM. Results show that our manual tracing algorithm is reliable, and that septal volume measurements obtained via manual and automated methods correlate significantly with each other (p<.001). Both manual and automated methods detected significantly enlarged septal nuclei in patients with temporal lobe epilepsy in accord with a proposed compensatory neuroplastic process related to the strong connections between septal nuclei and hippocampi. Septal thickness, which was simple to measure with excellent inter-rater reliability, correlated well with both manual and automated septal volume, suggesting it could serve as an easy-to-measure surrogate for septal volume in future studies. Our results call attention to the important though understudied human septal region, confirm its enlargement in temporal lobe epilepsy, and provide a reliable new manual delineation protocol that will facilitate continued study of this critical region.
DOI 10.1016/j.neuroimage.2014.04.026
PubMed ID 24736183
PubMed Central ID PMC4180657
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