4.7 Article

Spatial-temporal atlas of human fetal brain development during the early second trimester

Journal

NEUROIMAGE
Volume 82, Issue -, Pages 115-126

Publisher

ACADEMIC PRESS INC ELSEVIER SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1016/j.neuroimage.2013.05.063

Keywords

Fetal MRI; Second-trimester; Atlas; Human brain development

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [31071050, 81001223]
  2. National Institutes of Health [NIA P 50 AG16570, NIBIB EB01651, NLM LM05639, NCRR RR019771, NIMH R01 MH071940, NIBIB 9P41EB015922-15, NCRR 2-P41-RR-013642-15, NCRR U54 RR021813, U24-RR025736, U24-RR021992]
  3. Graduate Students Innovation Funds of Shandong University [21300070613236]
  4. Doctoral Foundation of Shandong Province [BS2010YY042, BS2010YY048, BS2012YY009]
  5. Special Funds for Postdoctoral Innovative Projects of Shandong Province [201002024]

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During the second trimester, the human fetal brain undergoes numerous changes that lead to substantial variation in the neonatal in terms of its morphology and tissue types. As fetal MRI is more and more widely used for studying the human brain development during this period, a spatiotemporal atlas becomes necessary for characterizing the dynamic structural changes. In this study, 34 postmortem human fetal brains with gestational ages ranging from 15 to 22 weeks were scanned using 7.0 T MR. We used automated morphometrics, tensor-based morphometry and surface modeling techniques to analyze the data. Spatiotemporal atlases of each week and the overall atlas covering the whole period with high resolution and contrast were created. These atlases were used for the analysis of age-specific shape changes during this period, including development of the cerebral wall, lateral ventricles, Sylvian fissure, and growth direction based on local surface measurements. Our findings indicate that growth of the subplate zone is especially striking and is the main cause for the lamination pattern changes. Changes in the cortex around Sylvian fissure demonstrate that cortical growth may be one of the mechanisms for gyration. Surface deformation mapping, revealed by local shape analysis, indicates that there is global anterior-posterior growth pattern, with frontal and temporal lobes developing relatively quickly during this period. Our results are valuable for understanding the normal brain development trajectories and anatomical characteristics. These week-by-week fetal brain atlases can be used as reference in in vivo studies, and may facilitate the quantification of fetal brain development across space and time. (C) 2013 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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