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FC12-03 - DTI-based in vivo mapping of subregions within the human hypothalamus

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  16 April 2020

P. Schoenknecht
Affiliation:
University of Leipzig, Dept. of Psychiatry, Leipzig, Germany
A. Anwander
Affiliation:
Max Planck Institute, Leipzig, Germany
F. Petzold
Affiliation:
University of Leipzig, Dept. of Psychiatry, Leipzig, Germany
S. Schindler
Affiliation:
University of Leipzig, Dept. of Psychiatry, Leipzig, Germany
T. Knoesche
Affiliation:
Max Planck Institute, Leipzig, Germany
U. Hegerl
Affiliation:
University of Leipzig, Dept. of Psychiatry, Leipzig, Germany
R. Turner
Affiliation:
Max Planck Institute, Leipzig, Germany
S. Geyer
Affiliation:
Max Planck Institute, Leipzig, Germany

Abstract

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Introduction

The hypothalamus is involved in many aspects of behavioral responses but parcellations of hypothalamic subnuclei have only been feasible in post-mortem brains. Thus it would be-from a clinical point of view-highly desirable if hypothalamic subnuclei could be delineated also noninvasively in living subjects. This study is a first step in this direction: We exploited the directionality information inherent in high-resolution DTI data to map subregions of the hypothalamus in healthy volunteers.

directionality information using DTI data to map subregions of the hypothalamus.

Methods

We scanned 10 subjects with a Siemens 3 T scanner, acquired DTI and T1 scans. We computed the similarity of fiber orientations between all voxels and subjects, and clustered the similarity matrix in 3 regions using a k-means algorithm.

Results

The diffusion images showed anisotropic tissue orientation within the hypothalamus which was consistent across subjects. The clustering in 3 regions resulted in an anatomically coherent arrangement of clusters across hemispheres and subjects. In each ROI, we found an anterior, a posteromedial, and a lateral subdivision with consistent microscopic tissue orientations across subjects.

Conclusion

This is to our best knowledge the first study that demonstrates the fine-grained microstructural organization within the human hypothalamus noninvasively in living subjects.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © European Psychiatric Association 2011
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