PLoS ONE (Jan 2015)

In Vivo 7T MRI of the Non-Human Primate Brainstem.

  • Laura M Zitella,
  • YiZi Xiao,
  • Benjamin A Teplitzky,
  • Daniel J Kastl,
  • Yuval Duchin,
  • Kenneth B Baker,
  • Jerrold L Vitek,
  • Gregor Adriany,
  • Essa Yacoub,
  • Noam Harel,
  • Matthew D Johnson

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0127049
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10, no. 5
p. e0127049

Abstract

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Structural brain imaging provides a critical framework for performing stereotactic and intraoperative MRI-guided surgical procedures, with procedural efficacy often dependent upon visualization of the target with which to operate. Here, we describe tools for in vivo, subject-specific visualization and demarcation of regions within the brainstem. High-field 7T susceptibility-weighted imaging and diffusion-weighted imaging of the brain were collected using a customized head coil from eight rhesus macaques. Fiber tracts including the superior cerebellar peduncle, medial lemniscus, and lateral lemniscus were identified using high-resolution probabilistic diffusion tractography, which resulted in three-dimensional fiber tract reconstructions that were comparable to those extracted from sequential application of a two-dimensional nonlinear brain atlas warping algorithm. In the susceptibility-weighted imaging, white matter tracts within the brainstem were also identified as hypointense regions, and the degree of hypointensity was age-dependent. This combination of imaging modalities also enabled identifying the location and extent of several brainstem nuclei, including the periaqueductal gray, pedunculopontine nucleus, and inferior colliculus. These clinically-relevant high-field imaging approaches have potential to enable more accurate and comprehensive subject-specific visualization of the brainstem and to ultimately improve patient-specific neurosurgical targeting procedures, including deep brain stimulation lead implantation.