A probabilistic atlas of the human thalamic nuclei combining ex vivo MRI and histology
Juan Eugenio Iglesias, Ricardo Insausti, Garikoitz Lerma-Usabiaga,, Martina Bocchetta, Koen Van Leemput, Douglas N Greve, Andre van der Kouwe,, Bruce Fischl, Cesar Caballero-Gaudes, Pedro M Paz-Alonso

TL;DR
This paper introduces a probabilistic atlas of human thalamic nuclei created from ex vivo MRI and histology, enabling improved in vivo segmentation and analysis of thalamic structures in neuroimaging.
Contribution
The study presents a novel probabilistic atlas combining ex vivo MRI and histology data, enhancing in vivo thalamic segmentation accuracy and reliability.
Findings
The atlas shows good agreement with histological volume data.
It demonstrates high test-retest reliability in segmentation.
It can detect thalamic differences in Alzheimer's disease.
Abstract
The human thalamus is a brain structure that comprises numerous, highly specific nuclei. Since these nuclei are known to have different functions and to be connected to different areas of the cerebral cortex, it is of great interest for the neuroimaging community to study their volume, shape and connectivity in vivo with MRI. In this study, we present a probabilistic atlas of the thalamic nuclei built using ex vivo brain MRI scans and histological data, as well as the application of the atlas to in vivo MRI segmentation. The atlas was built using manual delineation of 26 thalamic nuclei on the serial histology of 12 whole thalami from six autopsy samples, combined with manual segmentations of the whole thalamus and surrounding structures (caudate, putamen, hippocampus, etc.) made on in vivo brain MR data from 39 subjects. The 3D structure of the histological data and corresponding…
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