Skip to main content

This is a preprint.

It has not yet been peer reviewed by a journal.

The National Library of Medicine is running a pilot to include preprints that result from research funded by NIH in PMC and PubMed.

ArXiv logoLink to ArXiv
[Preprint]. 2023 May 5:arXiv:2305.03413v1. [Version 1]

Domain-agnostic segmentation of thalamic nuclei from joint structural and diffusion MRI

Henry F J Tregidgo, Sonja Soskic, Mark D Olchanyi, Juri Althonayan, Benjamin Billot, Chiara Maffei, Polina Golland, Anastasia Yendiki, Daniel C Alexander, Martina Bocchetta, Jonathan D Rohrer, Juan Eugenio Iglesias
PMCID: PMC10187362  PMID: 37205264

Abstract

The human thalamus is a highly connected subcortical grey-matter structure within the brain. It comprises dozens of nuclei with different function and connectivity, which are affected differently by disease. For this reason, there is growing interest in studying the thalamic nuclei in vivo with MRI. Tools are available to segment the thalamus from 1 mm T1 scans, but the contrast of the lateral and internal boundaries is too faint to produce reliable segmentations. Some tools have attempted to incorporate information from diffusion MRI in the segmentation to refine these boundaries, but do not generalise well across diffusion MRI acquisitions. Here we present the first CNN that can segment thalamic nuclei from T1 and diffusion data of any resolution without retraining or fine tuning. Our method builds on a public histological atlas of the thalamic nuclei and silver standard segmentations on high-quality diffusion data obtained with a recent Bayesian adaptive segmentation tool. We combine these with an approximate degradation model for fast domain randomisation during training. Our CNN produces a segmentation at 0.7 mm isotropic resolution, irrespective of the resolution of the input. Moreover, it uses a parsimonious model of the diffusion signal at each voxel (fractional anisotropy and principal eigenvector) that is compatible with virtually any set of directions and b-values, including huge amounts of legacy data. We show results of our proposed method on three heterogeneous datasets acquired on dozens of different scanners. An implementation of the method is publicly available at https://freesurfer.net/fswiki/ThalamicNucleiDTI.

Full Text Availability

The license terms selected by the author(s) for this preprint version do not permit archiving in PMC. The full text is available from the preprint server.

Under review


Articles from ArXiv are provided here courtesy of arXiv

RESOURCES