Narrow your search

Library

KU Leuven (26)

AP (1)

KBR (1)

KDG (1)

Odisee (1)

Thomas More Kempen (1)

Thomas More Mechelen (1)

UAntwerpen (1)

UCLL (1)

UGent (1)

More...

Resource type

dissertation (24)

book (4)

digital (1)


Language

English (21)

Dutch (6)

Undetermined (1)


Year
From To Submit

2024 (1)

2022 (3)

2021 (2)

2019 (1)

2017 (2)

More...
Listing 1 - 10 of 28 << page
of 3
>>
Sort by

Book
Diffusion Tensor Imaging : A Practical Handbook
Authors: --- ---
ISBN: 1493931180 1493931172 9781493931170 Year: 2016 Publisher: New York, NY : Springer New York : Imprint: Springer,

Loading...
Export citation

Choose an application

Bookmark

Abstract

This book provides an overview of the practical aspects of diffusion tensor imaging (DTI), from understanding the basis of the technique through selection of the right protocols, trouble-shooting data quality, and analyzing DTI data optimally. DTI is a non-invasive magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) technique for visualizing and quantifying tissue microstructure based on diffusion. The book discusses the theoretical background underlying DTI and advanced techniques based on higher-order models and multi-shell diffusion imaging. It covers the practical implementation of DTI; derivation of information from DTI data; and a range of clinical applications, including neurosurgical planning and the assessment of brain tumors. Its practical utility is enhanced by decision schemes and a fully annotated DTI brain atlas, including color fractional anisotropy maps and 3D tractography reconstructions of major white matter fiber bundles. Featuring contributions from leading specialists in the field of DTI, Diffusion Tensor Imaging: A Practical Handbook is a valuable resource for radiologists, neuroradiologists, MRI technicians, and clinicians.

Functional magnetic resonance imaging studies of visual motion processing in the human brain
Authors: ---
ISBN: 9058671003 Year: 2001 Volume: 226 Publisher: Leuven Leuven University Press


Digital
Diffusion tensor imaging : a practical handbook
Authors: --- ---
ISBN: 9781493931170 9781493931187 Year: 2016 Publisher: New York, N.Y. Springer

Loading...
Export citation

Choose an application

Bookmark

Abstract

This book provides an overview of the practical aspects of diffusion tensor imaging (DTI), from understanding the basis of the technique through selection of the right protocols, trouble-shooting data quality, and analyzing DTI data optimally. DTI is a non-invasive magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) technique for visualizing and quantifying tissue microstructure based on diffusion. The book discusses the theoretical background underlying DTI and advanced techniques based on higher-order models and multi-shell diffusion imaging. It covers the practical implementation of DTI; derivation of information from DTI data; and a range of clinical applications, including neurosurgical planning and the assessment of brain tumors. Its practical utility is enhanced by decision schemes and a fully annotated DTI brain atlas, including color fractional anisotropy maps and 3D tractography reconstructions of major white matter fiber bundles. Featuring contributions from leading specialists in the field of DTI, Diffusion Tensor Imaging: A Practical Handbook is a valuable resource for radiologists, neuroradiologists, MRI technicians, and clinicians.


Book
Functional neuroimaging in patients with failed back surgery syndrome treated with spinal cord stimulator: the investigation of supraspinal effects of spinal cord stimulation
Authors: --- --- --- ---
Year: 2013 Publisher: Brussel VUB

Loading...
Export citation

Choose an application

Bookmark

Abstract

Keywords


Dissertation
Visualization and Quantification of White Matter Impairment in Motor Neuron Disease using Diffusion Tensor Imaging.
Authors: --- --- ---
ISBN: 9789090250748 Year: 2010 Publisher: Leuven KUL. Faculteit geneeskunde

Loading...
Export citation

Choose an application

Bookmark

Abstract

De Engelse term “motor neuron disease” (MND) wordt meestal gebruikt om t e verwijzen naar een groep van neurodegeneratieve aandoeningen, waarbij dysfunctie en degeneratie v an het motorische systeem centraal staan. De meest voorkomende vorm (of fenotype) van MND is amyotrofe laterale sclerose (ALS), een aandoening w aarbij de motorneuronen in het ruggenmerg en de hersenstam (de perifere motorneuronen, PMN) en deze in de motor en premotor cortex (de centrale motorneuronen, CMN) progressief aftakelen en degenereren. Hierdoor verli ezen ALS patienten geleidelijk de controle over vrijwillige beweging. An dere aandoeningen die onder de noemer MND geplaatst kunnen worden zijn p rimaire laterale sclerose (PLS) en progressieve musculaire atrofie (PMA) , waarbij er respectievelijk enkel klinische evidentie is van aantasting van de CMN of van de PMN. Alhoewel al deze aandoeningen eerder zeldzaam voorkomen, is hun verloop snel progressief en onvermijdelijk fataal, met een ietwat mildere prognose voor PLS. In 5-10 % van alle ALS patiënten ligt een genetische afwijking aan de basi s van de ziekte. Voor alle andere ALS patienten, alsook voor PLS en PMA patienten, is de etiologie van hun aandoening nog on

Keywords


Book
Data-driven Local and Global Reconstruction of White Matter Fibres in Diffusion-Weighted Imaging
Authors: --- --- ---
Year: 2016 Publisher: Leuven KU Leuven.Faculteit ingenieurswetenschappen

Loading...
Export citation

Choose an application

Bookmark

Abstract

Mapping the structural network topology of the human brain is a fundamental challenge in science, and one that may advance our understanding and treatment of neurological and neuropsychiatric disorders. Diffusion-weighted magnetic resonance imaging (DWI) is currently the only non-invasive technique for probing the structural connectivity in the brain in vivo. Its principle is based on indirect measurement of the diffusion anisotropy of water, which is correlated with tissue microstructure. Estimating the local geometry of axonal fibres then hinges on biophysical models of diffusion in white matter. Such local estimates can subsequently be integrated along the image to reconstruct global structural connections in the brain, a process known as tractography. Many state-of-the-art DWI analysis methods build on strong model assumptions about the signal in white matter, which are hard to validate and may not generalize to other tissues and pathology. In this thesis, we therefore aim to reconstruct the local and global fibre configuration in brain white matter with as few prior assumptions about the microstructure as possible. Instead, we develop data-driven methodology, informed by spatial priors, population priors, and the signal itself. From this perspective, we develop a global tractography framework that integrates a spatial prior on the continuity of white matter fibres into a minimal convolutive multi-tissue model for DWI in the brain, based on a fibre response function that is estimated from and thus adapted to the data at hand. In this method, local fibre orientation estimates inform the global track configuration and vice versa, hence integrating local and global scales into one Markov chain Monte Carlo optimization framework. Results show improved specificity of valid connections and maintain a quantitative correspondence between track density and the apparent fibre density in the data. Secondly, we introduce population priors in the form of atlases of the local fibre orientation or of the global white matter bundle label to which individual fibres belong. As such, tractography in individual subjects is informed by common structure found across a cohort. Results indicate that such priors can reduce false positive tracks, thus improving specificity. Finally, we develop a blind source separation technique for multi-shell DWI, decomposing the data as a convolutive mixture of nonnegative tissue orientation distribution functions and corresponding response functions, without assuming the latter as known thus fully unsupervised. In healthy human brain data, the resulting components are associated with white matter fibres, grey matter, and cerebrospinal fluid. This factorization is on par with state-of-the-art supervised methods, as demonstrated also in Monte-Carlo simulations evaluating accuracy and precision. In animal data and in the presence of edema, our method is able to recover unseen tissue structure, fully data-driven. In summary, we developed local and global fibre reconstruction methods for DWI that improve over the state-of-the-art and extend to applications in preclinical data and pathology.

Keywords

Theses


Dissertation
Cognitive and neuroanatomical markers of dyslexia : a categorical perception and diffusion tensor imaging study.
Authors: --- --- --- ---
Year: 2012 Publisher: Leuven K.U.Leuven. Faculteit Psychologie en pedagogische wetenschappen. Departement Pedagogische wetenschappen

Loading...
Export citation

Choose an application

Bookmark

Abstract

This thesis focuses on the cognitive and neuroanatomical aspects of reading related subskills (such as phonology, orthography, speech perception and auditory processing) and on its dysfunction in dyslexia. The most prominent etiological theory on dyslexia postulates that the reading problems result from a phonological deficit, more specifically a deficit in the representation, storage and/or retrieval of speech sounds. It has been suggested that this phonological deficit is secondary to a more basic auditory deficit, but despite substantial research effort, the nature of these auditory problems remains hotly debated. A first controversy concerns the extent to which auditory problems in dyslexics are speech-specific, namely whether they can be reduced to basic auditory processing problems or whether they are phonetic in origin. A second topic of debate concerns the extent to which the auditory problems are specific to the processing of rapidly changing temporal information or whether they encompass a broader range of complex spectrotemporal processing. To address both questions within one test paradigm, we created a categorical perception task using four continua of similar acoustic complexity: (1) a speech contrast exploiting temporal cues (/ba/-/da/), (2) a speech contrast defined by non-temporal spectral cues (/u/-/y/), (3) a non-speech temporal contrast (spectrally rotated /ba/-/da/), and (4) a non-speech non-temporal contrast (spectrally rotated /u/-/y/). This design was first applied in an adult sample of 31 normal and 31 dyslexic readers (manuscript 1), and later in a 11-year old sample of 25 normal and 13 dyslexic readers (manuscript 2). In both studies, dyslexic readers demonstrate a specific deficit in the /bA/-/dA/ and rotated /bA/-/dA/-condition, which indicates a deficit in processing rapidly changing auditory information which is not speech-specific. At the neural level, it might be that these temporal specific processing problems are rooted in a decreased myelination, since this is crucial for a fast transmission of action potentials. Diffusion Tensor Imaging (DTI) provides a unique tool to non-invasively measure white matter properties, reflecting indirectly the degree of myelination. In addition, DTI also enables a 3D-reconstruction of white matter connections which is of particular interest to reading since this involves a widespread network of distant brain regions. The most consistent finding across previous DTI studies is that white matter integrity in the left temporoparietal region relates to reading and is decreased in dyslexic readers (review and meta-analysis in manuscript 3). However, evidence is sparse on which white matter bundle corresponds to this and how it relates to reading underlying subskills. We therefore conducted a DTI-study in the 20 best normal reading and 20 poorest dyslexic reading adults of manuscript 1 to investigate specific white matter tracts in relation to phonological and orthographic processing (manuscript 4). Results indicate that dyslexic adults show a lower white matter integrity in the left dorsal arcuate fasciculus, which correlates with phonological processes, whereas no deficit is observed in the left ventral inferior-fronto-occipital-fasciculus, which relates to orthographic aspects of reading. Finally, in manuscript 5 we focus on white matter correlates of auditory temporal processing by linking the DTI-data to neurofunctional EEG-coherence measures of slow (i.e. 4Hz) and fast (i.e. 20Hz) modulations. Dyslexic readers display relative to normal readers a lower neurofunctional coherence for 20 Hz modulations as well as a decreased left lateralization of white matter integrity in the arcuate fasiculus and in the posterior part of the superior temporal gyrus. Interestingly, left lateralization in the latter white matter region correlates in typical readers with better coherence on the fast modulation (20 Hz) whereas this relation was opposite in dyslexic readers. To conclude, at the cognitive level our dyslexic participants displayed specific problems in processing rapidly changing auditory information, which might correspond at the neural level to a decreased left dominance of white matter integrity in the auditory and language regions. The well known phonological problems of dyslexic readers seem to be reflected in a lower white matter integrity of the left arcuate fasciculus, whereas the inferior-fronto-occipital-fasciculus, involved in orthographic processing, is intact in dyslexic adults.

Keywords


Dissertation
Karakterisatie van witte stof in de hersenen in ALS met gebruik van MR beeldvorming.
Authors: --- --- ---
Year: 2005 Publisher: Leuven K.U.Leuven. Faculteit Geneeskunde

Loading...
Export citation

Choose an application

Bookmark

Abstract

Keywords


Dissertation
Functionele magnetische resonantie beeldvorming bij emotie geïnduceerde hersenactiviteit bij de mens.
Authors: --- ---
Year: 2006 Publisher: Leuven K.U.Leuven. Faculteit Geneeskunde

Loading...
Export citation

Choose an application

Bookmark

Abstract

Keywords


Dissertation
Karakterisatie van witte stof in de hersenen in ALS met gebruik van MR beeldvorming.
Authors: --- --- ---
Year: 2005 Publisher: Leuven K.U.Leuven. Faculteit Geneeskunde

Loading...
Export citation

Choose an application

Bookmark

Abstract

Keywords

Listing 1 - 10 of 28 << page
of 3
>>
Sort by