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| Nature 404, 190 - 193 (2000) © Macmillan Publishers Ltd. |
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Growth patterns in the developing brain detected by using continuum mechanical tensor maps
PAUL M. THOMPSON, JAY N. GIEDD, ROGER P. WOODS, DAVID MACDONALD, ALAN C. EVANS & ARTHUR W. TOGA
The dynamic nature of growth and degenerative disease processes requires
the design of sensitive strategies to detect, track and quantify structural
change in the brain in its full spatial and temporal complexity.
Although volumes of brain substructures are known to change during development, detailed maps of these dynamic growth processes have been unavailable.
Here we report the creation of spatially complex, four-dimensional quantitative
maps of growth patterns in the developing human brain, detected using a tensor
mapping strategy with greater spatial detail and sensitivity than previously
obtainable. By repeatedly scanning children (aged 315 years) across
time spans of up to four years, a rostro-caudal wave of growth was detected
at the corpus callosum, a fibre system that relays information between brain
hemispheres. Peak growth rates, in fibres innervating association and language
cortices, were attenuated after puberty, and contrasted sharply with a severe,
spatially localized loss of subcortical grey matter. Conversely, at ages 36
years, the fastest growth rates occurred in frontal networks that regulate
the planning of new actions. Local rates, profiles, and principal directions
of growth were visualized in each individual child.