Frontiers in Human Neuroscience (Aug 2016)

Identification of reliable sulcal patterns of the human rolandic region

  • Charles Mellerio,
  • Charles Mellerio,
  • Charles Mellerio,
  • Marie-Noelle Lapointe,
  • Pauline Roca,
  • Pauline Roca,
  • Pauline Roca,
  • Sylvain Charron,
  • Sylvain Charron,
  • Sylvain Charron,
  • Laurence Legrand,
  • Jean-François Meder,
  • Catherine Oppenheim,
  • Catherine Oppenheim,
  • Jean-François Meder,
  • Jean-François Meder,
  • Catherine Oppenheim,
  • Arnaud Cachia,
  • Arnaud Cachia,
  • Arnaud Cachia,
  • Arnaud Cachia

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fnhum.2016.00410
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10

Abstract

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A major feature of the human cortex is its huge morphological variability. Although a comprehensive literature about the sulco-gyral pattern of the central region is available from post-mortem data, a reliable and reproducible characterization from in vivo data is still lacking. The aim of this study was to test the reliability of morphological criteria of the central region sulci used in post-mortem data, when applied to in vivo MRI data.Thirty right-handed healthy individuals were included in the study. Automated segmentation and three-dimensional surface-based rendering were obtained from clinical 3D T1-weighted MRI. Two senior radiologists labelled the three sulci composing the central region (precentral [PreCS], central [CS] and postcentral [PostCS]) and analyzed their morphological variations using 47 standard criteria derived from Ono’s atlas based on post-mortem data. For each criterion, inter-rater concordance and comparison with the occurrence frequency provided in Ono’s atlas were estimated. Overall, the sulcal pattern criteria derived from MRI data were highly reproducible between the raters with a high mean inter-rater concordance in the three sulci (CS: =0.92 in left hemisphere / =0.91 in right hemisphere; PreCS: =0.91/ =0.93; PostCS: = 0.84 / 0.79). Only a very limited number of sulcal criteria significantly differed between the in vivo and the post-mortem data (CS: 2 criteria in the left hemisphere / 3 criteria in the right hemisphere; PreCS: 3 in the left and right hemispheres; PostCS: 3 in the left hemisphere and 5 in the right hemisphere). Our study provides a comprehensive description of qualitative sulcal patterns in the central region from in vivo clinical MRI with high agreement with previous post-mortem data. Such identification of reliable sulcal patterns of the central region visible with standard clinical MRI data paves the way for the detection of subtle variations of the central sulcation associated with variations of normal or pathological functioning.

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