Framework for integrated MRI average of the spinal cord white and gray matter: The MNI–Poly–AMU template - Archive ouverte HAL Accéder directement au contenu
Article Dans Une Revue NeuroImage Année : 2014

Framework for integrated MRI average of the spinal cord white and gray matter: The MNI–Poly–AMU template

Gaëtan Lévêque

Résumé

The field of spinal cord MRI is lacking a common template, as existing for the brain, which would allow extraction of multi-parametric data (diffusion-weighted, magnetization transfer, etc.) without user bias, thereby facilitating group analysis and multi-center studies. This paper describes a framework to produce an unbiased average anatomical template of the human spinal cord. The template was created by co-registering T2-weighted images (N = 16 healthy volunteers) using a series of pre-processing steps followed by non-linear registration. A white and gray matter probabilistic template was then merged to the average anatomical template, yielding the MNI-Poly-AMU template, which currently covers vertebral levels C1 to T6. New subjects can be registered to the template using a dedicated image processing pipeline. Validation was conducted on 16 additional subjects by comparing an automatic template-based segmentation and manual segmentation, yielding a median Dice coefficient of 0.89. The registration pipeline is rapid (~15 min), automatic after one C2/C3 landmark manual identification, and robust, thereby reducing subjective variability and bias associated with manual segmentation. The template can notably be used for measurements of spinal cord cross-sectional area, voxel-based morphometry, identification of anatomical features (e.g., vertebral levels, white and gray matter location) and unbiased extraction of multi-parametric data.

Dates et versions

hal-01117512 , version 1 (17-02-2015)

Identifiants

Citer

V.S. Fonov, A. Le Troter, M. Taso, B. de Leener, Gaëtan Lévêque, et al.. Framework for integrated MRI average of the spinal cord white and gray matter: The MNI–Poly–AMU template. NeuroImage, 2014, 102 (Pt2), pp.817-827. ⟨10.1016/j.neuroimage.2014.08.057⟩. ⟨hal-01117512⟩
159 Consultations
0 Téléchargements

Altmetric

Partager

Gmail Facebook X LinkedIn More