Frontiers in Neuroscience (Jun 2021)

Bundle-Specific Axon Diameter Index as a New Contrast to Differentiate White Matter Tracts

  • Muhamed Barakovic,
  • Muhamed Barakovic,
  • Muhamed Barakovic,
  • Muhamed Barakovic,
  • Gabriel Girard,
  • Gabriel Girard,
  • Gabriel Girard,
  • Simona Schiavi,
  • Simona Schiavi,
  • David Romascano,
  • Maxime Descoteaux,
  • Cristina Granziera,
  • Cristina Granziera,
  • Derek K. Jones,
  • Derek K. Jones,
  • Derek K. Jones,
  • Giorgio M. Innocenti,
  • Giorgio M. Innocenti,
  • Giorgio M. Innocenti,
  • Jean-Philippe Thiran,
  • Jean-Philippe Thiran,
  • Jean-Philippe Thiran,
  • Alessandro Daducci

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fnins.2021.646034
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15

Abstract

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In the central nervous system of primates, several pathways are characterized by different spectra of axon diameters. In vivo methods, based on diffusion-weighted magnetic resonance imaging, can provide axon diameter index estimates non-invasively. However, such methods report voxel-wise estimates, which vary from voxel-to-voxel for the same white matter bundle due to partial volume contributions from other pathways having different microstructure properties. Here, we propose a novel microstructure-informed tractography approach, COMMITAxSize, to resolve axon diameter index estimates at the streamline level, thus making the estimates invariant along trajectories. Compared to previously proposed voxel-wise methods, our formulation allows the estimation of a distinct axon diameter index value for each streamline, directly, furnishing a complementary measure to the existing calculation of the mean value along the bundle. We demonstrate the favourable performance of our approach comparing our estimates with existing histologically-derived measurements performed in the corpus callosum and the posterior limb of the internal capsule. Overall, our method provides a more robust estimation of the axon diameter index of pathways by jointly estimating the microstructure properties of the tissue and the macroscopic organisation of the white matter connectivity.

Keywords