Frontiers in Human Neuroscience (Mar 2021)

Brain Development From Newborn to Adolescence: Evaluation by Neurite Orientation Dispersion and Density Imaging

  • Xueying Zhao,
  • Xueying Zhao,
  • Jingjing Shi,
  • Fei Dai,
  • Fei Dai,
  • Lei Wei,
  • Lei Wei,
  • Boyu Zhang,
  • Boyu Zhang,
  • Xuchen Yu,
  • Xuchen Yu,
  • Chengyan Wang,
  • Wenzhen Zhu,
  • He Wang,
  • He Wang,
  • He Wang

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fnhum.2021.616132
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15

Abstract

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Neurite orientation dispersion and density imaging (NODDI) is a diffusion model specifically designed for brain magnetic resonance imaging. Despite recent studies suggesting that NODDI modeling might be more sensitive to brain development than diffusion tensor imaging (DTI), these studies were limited to a relatively small age range and mainly based on the manually operated region of interest analysis. Therefore, this study applied NODDI to investigate brain development in a large sample size of 214 subjects ranging in ages from 0 to 14. The whole brain was automatically segmented into 122 regions. The maturation trajectory of each region was characterized by the time course of diffusion metrics and further quantified using nonlinear regression. The NODDI-derived metrics, neurite density index (NDI) and orientation dispersion index (ODI), increased with age. And these two metrics were superior to the DTI-derived metrics in SVM regression models of age. The NDI in white matter exhibited a more rapid growth than that in gray matter (including the cortex and deep nucleus). These diffusion indicators experienced conspicuous increases during early childhood and the growth speed slowed down in adolescence. Region-specific maturation patterns were described throughout the brain, including white matter, cortical and deep gray matter. These development patterns were evaluated and discussed on the basis of NODDI’s model assumptions. To summarize, this study verified the high sensitivity of NODDI to age over a crucial developmental period from newborn to adolescence. Moreover, the existing knowledge of brain development has been complemented, suggesting that NODDI has a potential capability in the investigation of brain development.

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