Magnetic resonance imaging-based morphometry and landmark correlation of basal ganglia nuclei.

Standard

Magnetic resonance imaging-based morphometry and landmark correlation of basal ganglia nuclei. / Zhu, X L; Hamel, Wolfgang; Schrader, B; Weinert, D; Hedderich, J; Herzog, J; Volkmann, J; Deuschl, G; Müller, D; Mehdorn, H M.

in: ACTA NEUROCHIR, Jahrgang 144, Nr. 10, 10, 2002, S. 959-959.

Publikationen: SCORING: Beitrag in Fachzeitschrift/ZeitungSCORING: ZeitschriftenaufsatzForschungBegutachtung

Harvard

Zhu, XL, Hamel, W, Schrader, B, Weinert, D, Hedderich, J, Herzog, J, Volkmann, J, Deuschl, G, Müller, D & Mehdorn, HM 2002, 'Magnetic resonance imaging-based morphometry and landmark correlation of basal ganglia nuclei.', ACTA NEUROCHIR, Jg. 144, Nr. 10, 10, S. 959-959. <http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/12382123?dopt=Citation>

APA

Zhu, X. L., Hamel, W., Schrader, B., Weinert, D., Hedderich, J., Herzog, J., Volkmann, J., Deuschl, G., Müller, D., & Mehdorn, H. M. (2002). Magnetic resonance imaging-based morphometry and landmark correlation of basal ganglia nuclei. ACTA NEUROCHIR, 144(10), 959-959. [10]. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/12382123?dopt=Citation

Vancouver

Zhu XL, Hamel W, Schrader B, Weinert D, Hedderich J, Herzog J et al. Magnetic resonance imaging-based morphometry and landmark correlation of basal ganglia nuclei. ACTA NEUROCHIR. 2002;144(10):959-959. 10.

Bibtex

@article{37e65276b241462982f9942ece3f6505,
title = "Magnetic resonance imaging-based morphometry and landmark correlation of basal ganglia nuclei.",
abstract = "The two principle targets for deep brain stimulation or lesioning in patients with Parkinson's disease, the subthalamic nucleus (STN) and the globus pallidus internus (GPi), reveal a high degree of individual variability which is relevant to the planning of stereotactic operations. Both nuclei can clearly be delineated in T2WI spin echo MRI which was acquired under stereotactic conditions in general anesthesia before surgery. Such images of 35 patients served for retrospective morphometric analysis of different basal ganglia nuclei (STN, GP, red nucleus, and substantia nigra) and several anatomical landmarks (anterior and posterior commissure, maximum width of third ventricle, brain length and width). The average AC-PC distance was 25.74 mm (range 21 to 29 mm) and is in agreement with previous studies. On average, the center of the STN was located 12.65 mm (+/-1.3) lateral from the midline as determined 3 mm ventral to the intercommissural plane. The average width of the third ventricle was 7.05 mm (+/-2.41). The width of the third ventricle correlated with the laterality of the STN (r(right)=.78; r(left)=.83) and GP (r(right)=.76; r(left)=.68). Although to a lesser extent, significant correlations were also observed between the laterality of the STN and brain width, improving prediction of STN laterality by multiple linear regression analysis (r(right)=.82; r(left)=.87). Similarly, the laterality of GP correlated with brain width. In addition, gender-specific differences were detected. The STN and GP was located farther lateral in males which may be due to overall brain anatomy as gender-specific differences were also observed for brain width and length and AC-PC distance. MRI-based in vivo-localization of different basal ganglia nuclei extend statistical information from common histological brain atlases which are based on a limited number of brains. The correlations observed between different basal ganglia nuclei, i.e. the STN and GPi, and anatomical landmarks may be useful for surgical planning.",
author = "Zhu, {X L} and Wolfgang Hamel and B Schrader and D Weinert and J Hedderich and J Herzog and J Volkmann and G Deuschl and D M{\"u}ller and Mehdorn, {H M}",
year = "2002",
language = "Deutsch",
volume = "144",
pages = "959--959",
journal = "ACTA NEUROCHIR",
issn = "0001-6268",
publisher = "Springer Wien",
number = "10",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Magnetic resonance imaging-based morphometry and landmark correlation of basal ganglia nuclei.

AU - Zhu, X L

AU - Hamel, Wolfgang

AU - Schrader, B

AU - Weinert, D

AU - Hedderich, J

AU - Herzog, J

AU - Volkmann, J

AU - Deuschl, G

AU - Müller, D

AU - Mehdorn, H M

PY - 2002

Y1 - 2002

N2 - The two principle targets for deep brain stimulation or lesioning in patients with Parkinson's disease, the subthalamic nucleus (STN) and the globus pallidus internus (GPi), reveal a high degree of individual variability which is relevant to the planning of stereotactic operations. Both nuclei can clearly be delineated in T2WI spin echo MRI which was acquired under stereotactic conditions in general anesthesia before surgery. Such images of 35 patients served for retrospective morphometric analysis of different basal ganglia nuclei (STN, GP, red nucleus, and substantia nigra) and several anatomical landmarks (anterior and posterior commissure, maximum width of third ventricle, brain length and width). The average AC-PC distance was 25.74 mm (range 21 to 29 mm) and is in agreement with previous studies. On average, the center of the STN was located 12.65 mm (+/-1.3) lateral from the midline as determined 3 mm ventral to the intercommissural plane. The average width of the third ventricle was 7.05 mm (+/-2.41). The width of the third ventricle correlated with the laterality of the STN (r(right)=.78; r(left)=.83) and GP (r(right)=.76; r(left)=.68). Although to a lesser extent, significant correlations were also observed between the laterality of the STN and brain width, improving prediction of STN laterality by multiple linear regression analysis (r(right)=.82; r(left)=.87). Similarly, the laterality of GP correlated with brain width. In addition, gender-specific differences were detected. The STN and GP was located farther lateral in males which may be due to overall brain anatomy as gender-specific differences were also observed for brain width and length and AC-PC distance. MRI-based in vivo-localization of different basal ganglia nuclei extend statistical information from common histological brain atlases which are based on a limited number of brains. The correlations observed between different basal ganglia nuclei, i.e. the STN and GPi, and anatomical landmarks may be useful for surgical planning.

AB - The two principle targets for deep brain stimulation or lesioning in patients with Parkinson's disease, the subthalamic nucleus (STN) and the globus pallidus internus (GPi), reveal a high degree of individual variability which is relevant to the planning of stereotactic operations. Both nuclei can clearly be delineated in T2WI spin echo MRI which was acquired under stereotactic conditions in general anesthesia before surgery. Such images of 35 patients served for retrospective morphometric analysis of different basal ganglia nuclei (STN, GP, red nucleus, and substantia nigra) and several anatomical landmarks (anterior and posterior commissure, maximum width of third ventricle, brain length and width). The average AC-PC distance was 25.74 mm (range 21 to 29 mm) and is in agreement with previous studies. On average, the center of the STN was located 12.65 mm (+/-1.3) lateral from the midline as determined 3 mm ventral to the intercommissural plane. The average width of the third ventricle was 7.05 mm (+/-2.41). The width of the third ventricle correlated with the laterality of the STN (r(right)=.78; r(left)=.83) and GP (r(right)=.76; r(left)=.68). Although to a lesser extent, significant correlations were also observed between the laterality of the STN and brain width, improving prediction of STN laterality by multiple linear regression analysis (r(right)=.82; r(left)=.87). Similarly, the laterality of GP correlated with brain width. In addition, gender-specific differences were detected. The STN and GP was located farther lateral in males which may be due to overall brain anatomy as gender-specific differences were also observed for brain width and length and AC-PC distance. MRI-based in vivo-localization of different basal ganglia nuclei extend statistical information from common histological brain atlases which are based on a limited number of brains. The correlations observed between different basal ganglia nuclei, i.e. the STN and GPi, and anatomical landmarks may be useful for surgical planning.

M3 - SCORING: Zeitschriftenaufsatz

VL - 144

SP - 959

EP - 959

JO - ACTA NEUROCHIR

JF - ACTA NEUROCHIR

SN - 0001-6268

IS - 10

M1 - 10

ER -