4.7 Article

White matter extension of the Melbourne Children's Regional Infant Brain atlas: M-CRIB-WM

Journal

HUMAN BRAIN MAPPING
Volume 41, Issue 9, Pages 2317-2333

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/hbm.24948

Keywords

atlas; MRI; neonatal; parcellation; white matter

Funding

  1. University of Melbourne
  2. Royal Children's Hospital Foundation
  3. National Health and Medical Research Council [1024516, 1028822, 1153176, 1060733, 546519, 1081288, 1053787, 1053767, 1012236, 1108714, 1085754, 1160003]
  4. National Health and Medical Research Council of Australia [1085754, 1108714, 1153176, 1160003] Funding Source: NHMRC

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Brain atlases providing standardised identification of neonatal brain regions are key in investigating neurological disorders of early childhood. Our previously developed Melbourne Children's Regional Infant Brain (M-CRIB) and M-CRIB 2.0 neonatal brain atlases provide standardised parcellation of 100 brain regions including cortical, subcortical, and cerebellar regions. The aim of this study was to extend M-CRIB atlas coverage to include 54 white matter (WM) regions. Participants were 10 healthy term-born neonates that were used to create the initial M-CRIB atlas. WM regions were manually segmented based on T-2 images and co-registered diffusion tensor imaging-based, direction-encoded colour maps. Our labelled regions imitate the Johns Hopkins University neonatal atlas, with minor anatomical modifications. All segmentations were reviewed and approved by a paediatric radiologist and a neurosurgery research fellow for anatomical accuracy. The resulting neonatal WM atlas comprises 54 WM regions: 24 paired regions, and six unpaired regions comprising five corpus callosum subdivisions, and one pontine crossing tract. Detailed protocols for manual WM parcellations are provided, and the M-CRIB-WM atlas is presented together with the existing M-CRIB cortical, subcortical, and cerebellar parcellations in 10 individual neonatal MRI data sets. The novel M-CRIB-WM atlas, along with the M-CRIB cortical and subcortical atlases, provide neonatal whole brain MRI coverage in the first multi-subject manually parcellated neonatal atlas compatible with atlases commonly used at older time points. The M-CRIB-WM atlas is publicly available, providing a valuable tool that will help facilitate neuroimaging research into neonatal brain development in both healthy and diseased states.

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