PLoS ONE (Jan 2019)

Optimizing the intrinsic parallel diffusivity in NODDI: An extensive empirical evaluation.

  • Jose M Guerrero,
  • Nagesh Adluru,
  • Barbara B Bendlin,
  • H Hill Goldsmith,
  • Stacey M Schaefer,
  • Richard J Davidson,
  • Steven R Kecskemeti,
  • Hui Zhang,
  • Andrew L Alexander

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0217118
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 9
p. e0217118

Abstract

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PurposeNODDI is widely used in parameterizing microstructural brain properties. The model includes three signal compartments: intracellular, extracellular, and free water. The neurite compartment intrinsic parallel diffusivity (d∥) is set to 1.7 μm2⋅ms-1, though the effects of this assumption have not been extensively explored. This work investigates the optimality of d∥ = 1.7 μm2⋅ms-1 under varying imaging protocol, age groups, sex, and tissue type in comparison to other biologically plausible values of d∥.MethodsModel residuals were used as the optimality criterion. The model residuals were evaluated in function of d∥ over the range from 0.5 to 3.0 μm2⋅ms-1. This was done with respect to tissue type (i.e., white matter versus gray matter), sex, age (infancy to late adulthood), and diffusion-weighting protocol (maximum b-value). Variation in the estimated parameters with respect to d∥ was also explored.ResultsResults show d∥ = 1.7 μm2⋅ms-1 is appropriate for adult brain white matter but it is suboptimal for gray matter with optimal values being significantly lower. d∥ = 1.7 μm2⋅ms-1 was also suboptimal in the infant brain for both white and gray matter with optimal values being significantly lower. Minor optimum d∥ differences were observed versus diffusion protocol. No significant sex effects were observed. Additionally, changes in d∥ resulted in significant changes to the estimated NODDI parameters.ConclusionThe default (d∥) of 1.7 μm2⋅ms-1 is suboptimal in gray matter and infant brains.