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Results 451 - 500 of 1032
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Eickhoff Simon - - 2005
Maps of cytoarchitectonically defined cortical areas have proven to be a valuable tool for anatomic localization of activated brain regions revealed by functional imaging studies. However, architectonic data require observations in a sample of postmortem brains. They can only be used reliably for comparison with functional data as probabilistic maps ...
Paus Tomás - - 2005
This article provides an overview of the basic principles guiding research on brain-behaviour relationships in general, and as applied to studies of aggression during human development in particular. Key literature on magnetic resonance imaging of the structure and function of a developing brain was reviewed. The article begins with a ...
Oakden Wendy K - - 2005
Propylene glycol (PG) is an organic solvent used in a variety of parenterally injected pharmaceutical preparations. In this current study, we analyzed neonatal brains following routine MRS evaluation at 1.5 T, using the LCModel software, with and without the addition of PG to the analysis basis-set. We suggest including PG ...
Halberstadt W - - 2005
Computed tomography is used as an aid in the diagnosis of tuberculous meningitis (TBM) for the examination of a number of visual indicators of the disease. We present an algorithm that uses modified fuzzy c-means clustering to segment CT images of the brain into different tissue types. The ventricle/brain ratio ...
Cheng Lishui - - 2005
Brain MR image segmentation is an important research topic in medical image analysis area. In this paper, we propose an active contour model for brain MR image segmentation, based on a generalized level set formulation of the Mumford-Shah functional. The model embeds explicitly gradient information into the Mumford-Shah functional, and ...
Peña A - - 2005
The controlled cortical impact model has been used extensively to study focal traumatic brain injury. Although the impact variables can be well defined, little is known about the biomechanical trauma as delivered to different brain regions. This knowledge however could be valuable for interpretation of experiment (immunohistochemistry etc.), especially regarding ...
Boada Fernando E - - 2005
This chapter demonstrates the use of sodium magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) as a noninvasive, in vivo means to assess metabolic changes that ensue from loss of cell ion homeostasis due to cell death in the brain. The chapter is organized in two sections. In the first section, the constraints imposed ...
Zhou J - - 2005
A novel image segmentation approach by exploring one-class support vector machine (SVM) has been developed for the extraction of brain tumor from magnetic resonance (MR) images. Based on one-class SVM, the proposed method has the ability of learning the nonlinear distribution of the image data without prior knowledge, via the ...
Tsai Du-Yih - - 2005
We present an adaptive smoothing filter aiming to improve the visibility and detectability of the obscuration of the lentiform nucleus, which is one of the early signs of acute cerebral artery infraction, in CT brain images. The proposed method is able to enhance image data by removing noise without significantly ...
Ruf Amit - - 2005
We present an automated algorithm for tissue segmentation of noisy, low contrast magnetic resonance (MR) images of the brain. We use a mixture model composed of a large number of Gaussians, with each brain tissue represented by a large number of the Gaussian components in order to capture the complex ...
Wang Jinghua - - 2005
Image signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) and signal intensity (SI) inhomogeneities are factors that strongly affect the accuracy and precision of brain tissue segmentations in magnetic resonance image (MRI). In this work, SNR and contrast of brain images are optimized by TR and inversion recovery time TI in multi-spectrum MRI data sets. ...
Meier Dominik S - - 2005
A new method is presented for the automated anatomic labeling and comparative morphometric analysis of brain magnetic resonance imaging, warping a prelabeled atlas into congruence with the subject anatomy. The strategy emphasizes anatomically meaningful atlas deformations in the presence of strong degeneration and substantial morphologic differences, for example, cases with ...
Hou Zujun - - 2005
This paper presents a method to segment brain tissue from T1-weighted Magnetic Resonance (MR) images. A modified BayesShrink method is utilized to filter the image in wavelet transform domain before segmentation, where the shrinkage strength is automatically adjusted with respect to noise level. Then the fuzzy c-means clustering is applied ...
Park Sun Ah - - 2005
The authors report on an unusual case of extensive brain stem lesions as a manifestation of thrombotic thrombocytopenic purpura (TTP). A 28-year-old woman developed rapidly progressive neurologic deficits 5 days after a cesarean delivery. Her condition had been normal after delivery. Initial magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) revealed extensive T2 hyperintense ...
Hu Qingmao - - 2005
An algorithm to determine the human brain (gray matter (GM) and white matter (WM)) from computed tomography (CT) head volumes with large slice thickness is proposed based on thresholding and brain mask propagation. Firstly, a 2D reference image is chosen to represent the intensity characteristics of the original 3D data ...
Ma Y - - 2005
A comprehensive three-dimensional digital atlas database of the C57BL/6J mouse brain was developed based on magnetic resonance microscopy images acquired on a 17.6-T superconducting magnet. By using both manual tracing and an atlas-based semi-automatic segmentation approach, T2-weighted magnetic resonance microscopy images of 10 adult male formalin-fixed, excised C57BL/6J mouse brains ...
Tsushima Yoshito - - 2005
BACKGROUND: To determine the prevalence of abnormal findings on brain magnetic resonance (MR) examinations in adult participants of brain docking in order to assess its usefulness. METHODS: We analyzed screening brain MR examinations for 1113 adults (age, 52.6+/-8.5 years; range, 22-84; 761 male and 352 female) performed during 6-year period ...
Wadghiri Youssef Zaim - - 2004
Given the importance of genetically modified mice in studies of mammalian brain development and human congenital brain diseases, MRI has the potential to provide an efficient in vivo approach for analyzing mutant phenotypes in the early postnatal mouse brain. The combination of reduced tissue contrast at the high magnetic fields ...
Neil Jeffrey J - - 2004
The primary methods currently in use for imaging the infant brain are cranial ultrasound (CUS), computed tomography (CT) and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). This review outlines the relative strengths and weaknesses of these modalities in relation to the premature infant, with specific focus on the correlations between imaging findings and ...
Inglese Matilde - - 2004
The advent of MRI has made a remarkable progress in the understanding of age-related brain changes providing a noninvasive tool to study in vivo the normally aging individuals at multiple time points. However, conventional MRI techniques are unable to detect and quantify age-related microstructural changes that have been documented at ...
Illes Judy - - 2004
To examine different protocols for handling incidental findings on brain research MRIs, and provide a platform for establishing formal discussions of related ethical and policy issues. Corresponding authors identified from a database of peer-reviewed publications in 1991-2002 involving functional MRI (fMRI), alone or in combination with other imaging modalities, were ...
Iskandar Bermans J - - 2004
OBJECT: Children with shunt-treated hydrocephalus are exposed to serious amounts of radiation when undergoing computerized tomography (CT) scanning. The authors report their clinical experience with single-shot fast-spin echo (SSFSE) (quick-brain) magnetic resonance (MR) imaging as the modality of choice for the workup and follow up of patients in whom a ...
Tsai Ming-Han - - 2004
A 6-year-old, previously healthy male presented with fever and lethargy. Tuberculous meningitis was suspected after cerebrospinal fluid examination. Antituberculous drugs were administered, and an initial computed tomographic scan of brain revealed mild ventriculomegaly only. Steroids were instituted on day 16 and gradually withdrawn 1 month later. Nine weeks after the ...
Zarow C - - 2004
We have developed an agar-embedding method for brain-slicing that minimizes the geometrical distortions which arise from handling and slicing the fixed postmortem brain. To facilitate postmortem brain-magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) co-registration, each hemisphere is processed separately. We embed the fixed brain hemisphere with reference markers in agar. The block containing ...
Wang Lian-Chen - - 2004
Magnetic resonance (MR) imaging has been suggested to be helpful in delineating the lesions during the acute phase of angiostrongyliasis caused by Angiostrongylus cantonensis. In this study, antibody titers in serum samples of 3 rabbits were determined by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay, and brain MR images were obtained from 6 rabbits. ...
Rorden Chris - - 2004
Recent technological advances, such as functional imaging techniques, allow neuroscientists to measure and localize brain activity in healthy individuals. These techniques avoid many of the limitations of the traditional method for inferring brain function, which relies on examining patients with brain lesions. This has fueled the zeitgeist that the classical ...
Yu Olivier - - 2004
The purpose of this study was to perform serial texture analysis of brain MRI of cuprizone-treated mice for the assessment of regional demyelination and remyelination. Cuprizone-fed mice undergo a brain demyelination process. This process was followed over 56 days by MRI in the olfactory bulbs, cerebellum, putamen and brain stem. ...
Zang Da Wei - - 2004
Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) is becoming the preferred neuroimaging modality for the diagnosis of human amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS). A useful animal model of ALS is the superoxide dismutase 1G93A G1H transgenic mouse, which shows many of the clinico-pathological features of the human condition. We have employed a 4.7-Tesla MRI ...
Nitsche M A - - 2004
OBJECTIVE: To determine whether weak transcranial direct current stimulation (tDCS), which is an interesting new tool inducing prolonged cortical excitability shifts in humans, induces brain edema, disturbance of the blood-brain barrier or structural alterations of the brain detectable by magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). METHODS: In 10 healthy individuals, tDCS, which ...
Sironi Luigi - - 2004
Spontaneously hypertensive stroke-prone rats (SHRSP) develop brain abnormalities invariably preceded by the accumulation of acute-phase proteins in body fluids. This study describes the sequence of pathological events, and in particular the involvement of inflammation, at the onset of brain injury in this animal model. In SHRSP subjected to permissive dietary ...
Al-Shammri S - - 2004
OBJECTIVE: To determine the reliability of radionuclide cerebral blood perfusion imaging in confirming brain death irrespective of continued heartbeat. SUBJECTS AND METHODS: Twenty-eight patients (19 male and 9 female, aged 17-63 years) with severe brain injury and fully supported until the final cardiac asystole were included in the study. Two ...
Lalitanantpong Decha - - 2004
Magnetic resonance brain imaging provides good contrast between the three principal compartments of the brain: gray and white matter, and cerebrospinal fluid (CSF). Not only brain volumic and structural understanding, the application of magnetic imaging techniques as in Functional MRI (MRI), Magnetic resonance spectroscopy (MRS) also has greatly enhanced the ...
Kivisaari Reetta - - 2004
BACKGROUND: Recreational drug abuse is one of the most important risk factors for stroke in young adults. Abuse of opiates may lead to severe acute neurologic problems due to ischemia or hemorrhage. In contrast, their minor effects on brain structures are not well established. We evaluated brain magnetic resonance images ...
Said Rana R - - 2004
A 10-year-old boy with daily headache for 1 month and intermittent diplopia for 1 week was found to have a unilateral partial abducens palsy and bilateral papilledema; otherwise, his neurologic examination showed no abnormalities. A cranial computed tomographic (CT) scan was normal. Lumbar puncture disclosed a markedly elevated opening pressure ...
Chen Zhi-Jian - - 2004
OBJECT: The goal of this study was to validate a simple, inexpensive, and robust model system to be used as an in vitro surrogate for in vivo brain tissues in preclinical and exploratory studies of infusion-based intraparenchymal drug and cell delivery. METHODS: Agarose gels of varying concentrations and porcine brain ...
Longman Cheryl - - 2004
BACKGROUND: Muscle-eye-brain disease (MEB) is a rare autosomal recessive disorder characterized by congenital muscular dystrophy, structural eye abnormalities, and type II lissencephaly. Previous reports of brain abnormalities on magnetic resonance images (MRIs) in MEB have been in children older than 1 year. OBJECTIVE: To describe serial antenatal and postnatal brain ...
Wei Xingchang - - 2004
Changes in mean magnetic resonance imaging (MRI)-derived measurements between patient groups are often used to determine outcomes in therapeutic trials and other longitudinal studies of multiple sclerosis (MS). However, in day-to-day clinical practice the changes within individual patients may also be of interest In this paper, we estimated the measurement ...
Sherwood Chet C - - 2004
This report presents data regarding the brain structure of mountain gorillas (Gorilla beringei beringei) in comparison with other great apes. Magnetic resonance (MR) images of three mountain gorilla brains were obtained with a 3T scanner, and the volume of major neuroanatomical structures (neocortical gray matter, hippocampus, thalamus, striatum, and cerebellum) ...
Frank Guido K - - 2004
The understanding of the eating disorders (EDs) anorexia (AN) and bulimia nervosa (BN) has undergone remarkable advancements in the past decade. Most studies that have been done in AN show brain gray and white matter volume loss during the ill state that, at least in part, remit with recovery. Similar ...
Patriarche Julia - - 2004
Serial imaging is frequently performed on patients with diseases of the brain, to track and observe changes. Magnetic resonance imaging provides very detailed and rich information, and is therefore used frequently for this application. The data provided by MR can be so plentiful; however, that it obfuscates the information the ...
Stoffel Michael - - 2004
The volume of an experimental necrotic lesion of the cortex expands up to 400% of its initial size within the first 24 h after the insult. Lesion expansion, a clinically well known phenomenon, is often accompanied by perifocal brain edema and consequently difficult to image and to analyze by magnetic ...
Rossi Andrea - - 2004
We present the MR imaging findings of a girl with horizontal gaze palsy and progressive scoliosis (HGPPS). HGPPS is a rare congenital disorder characterized by absence of conjugate horizontal eye movements and accompanied by progressive scoliosis developing in childhood and adolescence. MR imaging depicted brain-stem hypoplasia with absence of the ...
Weber Marc-André - - 2004
RATIONALE AND OBJECTIVES: To assess if preradiation and early follow-up measurements of relative regional cerebral blood flow (rrCBF) can predict treatment outcome in patients with cerebral metastases and to evaluate rrCBF changes in tumor and normal tissue after stereotactic radiosurgery using arterial spin-labeling (ASL) and first-pass dynamic susceptibility-weighted contrast-enhanced (DSC) ...
Palmen S J M C - - 2004
Autism is now widely viewed as a neurodevelopmental disorder, although the underlying biological causes remain to be established. In this review, we examine the literature in magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) as applied to autism, discuss the findings that have emerged, and give directions for potential future research. To date, structural ...
Asanuma Taketoshi - - 2004
The present experiments were carried out to provide direct in vivo evidence for the involvement of c-Jun N-terminal kinase (JNK) in the induction of ischemic brain injury. Malonate, which produces lesions similar to those of focal ischemia-reperfusion by a reversible inhibition of succinate dehydrogenase in mitochondria, was injected into the ...
Cokluk C - - 2004
In spite of maximal microsurgical efforts, perilesional neural tissue can be injured by surgical instruments in the process of the separation and dissection of tumors. We hypothesized that transparent microballoon dissection could be helpful in the gentle separation of brain tissue from tumor by minimizing cerebral damage, and in separating ...
Begemann Martin - - 2004
Brain metastases from hepatoblastomas are rare. We report a 2-year-old male who developed multiple hemorrhagic intracranial metastases. Previous reports indicate that brain metastases are an almost uniformly fatal complication of hepatoblastoma, although one long-term survivor has been described. In a child with known hepatoblastoma, the development of neurologic signs or ...
Pfefferbaum Adolf - - 2004
High-resolution postmortem neuroimaging of the brain can play a role in research programs by providing archival and reslicable images of brain specimens before permanent sectioning. These images can supplement evidence attained from both traditional neuropathological observations and in vivo neuroimaging. Differential brain tissue conspicuity, detectable with MRI, is determined by ...
Mo Yuan-Heng - - 2004
Adrenomyeloneuropathy (AMN) is a phenotype variant of X-linked adrenoleukodystrophy. We present two patients with adult-onset AMN who were initially suspected to have demyelinating disorders radiologically and finally diagnosed on the basis of laboratory data. The brain magnetic resonance images showed abnormal signal intensity at pyramidal tracts and cerebellar hemisphere bilaterally ...
Ross Amy J - - 2004
The neurophysiological basis of cognition is relatively unexplained, with most studies reporting weak relationships between cognition and measures of brain function, such as event-related potentials, brain size and cerebral blood flow. Magnetic resonance spectroscopy (MRS) is an in vivo method used to detect neurochemicals within the brain that are relevant ...
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