4.7 Article

HybraPD atlas: Towards precise subcortical nuclei segmentation using multimodality medical images in patients with Parkinson disease

Journal

HUMAN BRAIN MAPPING
Volume 42, Issue 13, Pages 4399-4421

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/hbm.25556

Keywords

brain; globus pallidus; magnetic resonance imaging; neuroimaging; Parkinson's disease; substantia nigra

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [62071299, 61901256, 91949120, 82021002, 81971641, 81671239, 82001767]
  2. Clinical Research Plan of SHDC [2020YJZX0111, SHDC2020CR1038B]
  3. Natural Science Foundation of Zhejiang Province [LQ21H180008]
  4. China Postdoctoral Science Foundation [2019M662082]

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The study introduces a HybraPD atlas using QSM and T1w images from PD patients, providing templates and manually delineated subcortical nuclei for more accurate segmentation related to PD pathology. This atlas offers a more precise tool for studying brain pathological alterations in subcortical regions for PD research.
Human brain atlases are essential for research and surgical treatment of Parkinson's disease (PD). For example, deep brain stimulation for PD often requires human brain atlases for brain structure identification. However, few atlases can provide disease-specific subcortical structures for PD, and most of them are based on T1w and T2w images. In this work, we construct a HybraPD atlas using fused quantitative susceptibility mapping (QSM) and T1w images from 87 patients with PD. The constructed HybraPD atlas provides a series of templates, that is, T1w, GRE magnitude, QSM, R2*, and brain tissue probabilistic maps. Then, we manually delineate a parcellation map with 12 bilateral subcortical nuclei, which are highly related to PD pathology, such as sub-regions in globus pallidus and substantia nigra. Furthermore, we build a whole-brain parcellation map by combining existing cortical parcellation and white-matter segmentation with the proposed subcortical nuclei map. Considering the multimodality of the HybraPD atlas, the segmentation accuracy of each nucleus is evaluated using T1w and QSM templates, respectively. The results show that the HybraPD atlas provides more accurate segmentation than existing atlases. Moreover, we analyze the metabolic difference in subcortical nuclei between PD patients and healthy control subjects by applying the HybraPD atlas to calculate uptake values of contrast agents on positron emission tomography (PET) images. The atlas-based analysis generates accurate disease-related brain nuclei segmentation on PET images. The newly developed HybraPD atlas could serve as an efficient template to study brain pathological alterations in subcortical regions for PD research.

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