Automatic oculomotor nerve identification based on data‐driven fiber clustering

The oculomotor nerve (OCN) is the main motor nerve innervating eye muscles and can be involved in multiple flammatory, compressive, or pathologies. The diffusion magnetic resonance imaging (dMRI) tractography is now widely used to describe the trajectory of the OCN. However, the complex cranial stru...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inHuman brain mapping Vol. 43; no. 7; pp. 2164 - 2180
Main Authors Huang, Jiahao, Li, Mengjun, Zeng, Qingrun, Xie, Lei, He, Jianzhong, Chen, Ge, Liang, Jiantao, Li, Mingchu, Feng, Yuanjing
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Hoboken, USA John Wiley & Sons, Inc 01.05.2022
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Summary:The oculomotor nerve (OCN) is the main motor nerve innervating eye muscles and can be involved in multiple flammatory, compressive, or pathologies. The diffusion magnetic resonance imaging (dMRI) tractography is now widely used to describe the trajectory of the OCN. However, the complex cranial structure leads to difficulties in fiber orientation distribution (FOD) modeling, fiber tracking, and region of interest (ROI) selection. Currently, the identification of OCN relies on expert manual operation, resulting in challenges, such as the carries high clinical, time‐consuming, and labor costs. Thus, we propose a method that can automatically identify OCN from dMRI tractography. First, we choose the multi‐shell multi‐tissue constraint spherical deconvolution (MSMT‐CSD) FOD estimation model and deterministic tractography to describe the 3D trajectory of the OCN. Then, we rely on the well‐established computational pipeline and anatomical expertise to create a data‐driven OCN tractography atlas from 40 HCP data. We identify six clusters belonging to the OCN from the atlas, including the structures of three kinds of positional relationships (pass between, pass through, and go around) with the red nuclei and two kinds of positional relationships with medial longitudinal fasciculus. Finally, we apply the proposed OCN atlas to identify the OCN automatically from 40 new HCP subjects and two patients with brainstem cavernous malformation. In terms of spatial overlap and visualization, experiment results show that the automatically and manually identified OCN fibers are consistent. Our proposed OCN atlas provides an effective tool for identifying OCN by avoiding the traditional selection strategy of ROIs. In this work, we propose an automatic oculomotor nerve (OCN) identification method. We choose the multi‐shell multi‐tissue constraint spherical deconvolution (MSMT‐CSD) FOD estimation model and deterministic tractography to describe the three dimensional trajectory of the OCN after investigation the performance of different tractography methods for the reconstruction of the complete OCN pathway. Then, we rely on the well‐established computational pipeline and anatomical expertise to create a data‐driven OCN fiber clustering atlas from 40 HCP data. We identify six clusters belonging to the OCN from the atlas, including the structures of three kinds of positional relationships (pass between, pass through, and go around) with the red nuclei and two kinds of positional relationships with medial longitudinal fasciculus.
Bibliography:Funding information
Jiahao Huang and Mengjun Li authors contributed equally to this work.
Key Projects of Natural Science Foundation of Zhejiang Province, Grant/Award Number: LZ21F030003; Key Research and Development Project of Zhejiang Province, Grant/Award Number: 2020C03070; National Natural Science Foundation of China, Grant/Award Number: 61976190; Natural Science Foundation of Zhejiang Province, Grant/Award Number: LQ21F020017
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Funding information Key Projects of Natural Science Foundation of Zhejiang Province, Grant/Award Number: LZ21F030003; Key Research and Development Project of Zhejiang Province, Grant/Award Number: 2020C03070; National Natural Science Foundation of China, Grant/Award Number: 61976190; Natural Science Foundation of Zhejiang Province, Grant/Award Number: LQ21F020017
ISSN:1065-9471
1097-0193
1097-0193
DOI:10.1002/hbm.25779