Imaging mass spectrometry (IMS) is a molecular imaging technology that can measure thousands of biomolecules concurrently without prior tagging, making it particularly suitable for exploratory research. However, the data size and dimensionality often makes thorough extraction of relevant information impractical. To help guide and accelerate IMS data analysis, we recently developed a framework that integrates IMS measurements with anatomical atlases, opening up opportunities for anatomy-driven exploration of IMS data. One example is the automated anatomical interpretation of ion images, where empirically measured ion distributions are automatically decomposed into their underlying anatomical structures. While offering significant potential, IMS-atlas integration has thus far been restricted to the Allen Mouse Brain Atlas (AMBA) and mouse brain samples. Here, we expand the applicability of this framework by extending towards new animal species and a new set of anatomical atlases retrieved from the Scalable Brain Atlas (SBA). Furthermore, as many SBA atlases are based on magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) data, a new registration pipeline was developed that enables direct non-rigid IMS-to-MRI registration. These developments are demonstrated on protein-focused FTICR IMS measurements from coronal brain sections of a Parkinson's disease (PD) rat model. The measurements are integrated with an MRI-based rat brain atlas from the SBA. The new rat-focused IMS-atlas integration is used to perform automated anatomical interpretation and to find differential ions between healthy and diseased tissue. IMS-atlas integration can serve as an important accelerator in IMS data exploration, and with these new developments it can now be applied to a wider variety of animal species and modalities. This article is part of a Special Issue entitled: MALDI Imaging, edited by Dr. Corinna Henkel and Prof. Peter Hoffmann.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.bbapap.2017.02.016 | DOI Listing |
Clin Anat
January 2025
Department of Neurosurgery, Tulane University School of Medicine, New Orleans, Louisiana, USA.
Nowadays, consent to use donor bodies for medical education and research is obtained from the body donors and their families before the donation. Recently, the International Federation of Associations of Anatomists (IFAA) published guidelines that could restrict the appearance of cadaveric images in commercial anatomical resources such as textbooks and other educational products. These guidelines state that the donor must expressly consent to using such images for this purpose.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Med Imaging Radiat Sci
December 2024
Department of Radiotherapy, Instituto Brasileiro de Controle do Câncer (IBCC), Avenida Alcântara Machado, 2576, Mooca, 03102-002 São Paulo, SP, Brazil; Department of Radiotherapy, Instituto de Radiologia do Hospital das Clínicas - HCFMUSP (InRad), Hospital das Clínicas, University of São Paulo, Rua Doutor Ovídio Pires de Campos, 75, Portaria 1, Cerqueira César, 05403-010 São Paulo, SP, Brazil.
Purpose: Radiotherapy is a crucial part of breast cancer treatment. Precision in dose assessment is essential to minimize side effects. Traditionally, anatomical structures are delineated manually, a time-consuming process subject to variability.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAnn Biomed Eng
December 2024
Department of Mechanical Engineering and Materials Science, Washington University in St. Louis, 1 Brookings Drive, MSC 1185-208-125, St. Louis, MO, 63130, USA.
Purpose: To determine how the biomechanical vulnerability of the human brain is affected by features of individual anatomy and loading.
Methods: To identify the features that contribute most to brain vulnerability, we imparted mild harmonic acceleration to the head and measured the resulting brain motion and deformation using magnetic resonance elastography (MRE). Oscillatory motion was imparted to the heads of adult participants using a lateral actuator (n = 24) or occipital actuator (n = 24) at 20 Hz, 30 Hz, and 50 Hz.
Surg Radiol Anat
December 2024
Department of Anatomy, All India Institute of Medical Sciences, Bathinda, 151001, India.
Purpose: As digital education is encroaching on the traditional method, it is important to get, the feedback of medical students. The current study has been proposed to investigate the perception of first-year MBBS students, regarding the use of 3D atlas for gross anatomy study as adjunct along with cadaveric dissection.
Methods: The feedback of 91 first-year MBBS students, regarding the incorporation of a 3D atlas in the dissection lab along with traditional cadaveric dissection was collected.
Netw Neurosci
December 2024
Department of Clinical Cognition Science, Clinic of Neurology at the RWTH Aachen University Faculty of Medicine, ZBMT, Aachen, Germany.
Networks in the parietal and premotor cortices enable essential human abilities regarding motor processing, including attention and tool use. Even though our knowledge on its topography has steadily increased, a detailed picture of hemisphere-specific integrating pathways is still lacking. With the help of multishell diffusion magnetic resonance imaging, probabilistic tractography, and the Graph Theory Analysis, we investigated connectivity patterns between frontal premotor and posterior parietal brain areas in healthy individuals.
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