• Ann. N. Y. Acad. Sci. · Dec 2005

    White matter tractography by means of Turboprop diffusion tensor imaging.

    • Konstantinos Arfanakis, Minzhi Gui, and Mariana Lazar.
    • Department of Biomedical Engineering, Illinois Institute of Technology, 10 West 32nd Street, E1-116, Chicago, IL 60616, USA. arfanakis@iit.edu
    • Ann. N. Y. Acad. Sci. 2005 Dec 1; 1064: 78-87.

    AbstractWhite matter fiber-tractography by means of diffusion tensor imaging (DTI) is a noninvasive technique that provides estimates of the structural connectivity of the brain. However, conventional fiber-tracking methods using DTI are based on echo-planar image acquisitions (EPI), which suffer from image distortions and artifacts due to magnetic susceptibility variations and eddy currents. Thus, a large percentage of white matter fiber bundles that are mapped using EPI-based DTI data are distorted, and/or terminated early, while others are completely undetected. This severely limits the potential of fiber-tracking techniques. In contrast, Turboprop imaging is a multiple-shot gradient and spin-echo (GRASE) technique that provides images with significantly fewer susceptibility and eddy current-related artifacts than EPI. The purpose of this work was to evaluate the performance of fiber-tractography techniques when using data obtained with Turboprop-DTI. All fiber pathways that were mapped were found to be in agreement with the anatomy. There were no visible distortions in any of the traced fiber bundles, even when these were located in the vicinity of significant magnetic field inhomogeneities. Additionally, the Turboprop-DTI data used in this research were acquired in less than 19 min of scan time. Thus, Turboprop appears to be a promising DTI data acquisition technique for tracing white matter fibers.

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