Compartir
Título
Advances in the visualization and the study of the pyramidal tract with magnetic resonance tractography
Autor(es)
Palabras clave
Tractography
Pyramidal tract
3D imaging
Imaging analysis
Limitations
Clasificación UNESCO
2410.02 Anatomía Humana
Fecha de publicación
2019
Editor
Springer
Citación
Muradas Mujika, K., Juanes Méndez, J. A., & Framiñan de Miguel, A. (2019). Advances in the Visualization and the Study of the Pyramidal Tract with Magnetic Resonance Tractography. Journal of Medical Systems, 43(5), 106.
Resumen
[EN]Over the last several years, specific radiological techniques have been used for the analysis of the central nervous system
pathways. They involve a magnetic resonance sequence called diffusion tensor imaging. In order to process the data provided
by this sequence it is necessary to use software that can post-process the image and render three-dimensional images of the central
nervous system pathways. Thanks to this sequence it has been possible to isolate over the years many nerve pathways that cross
the brain tissue, particularly those which occupy a significant space. This sequence could have a large variety of uses, such as
helping with the study of brain anatomy, assisting with surgery planning, or establishing a relationship between the nerve fibers
and tumoral lesions. However, there has been an increasing number of cases that report a low reliability related to the
tractographic representation of this technique. Our goal with this article is to analyse a specific nerve pathway, the piramidal
tract, in order to assess the coherence between the images obtained and the anatomy that is already known from the perspective of
the radiological image, and to compare this tract between different patients.
Descripción
Article number 106
URI
ISSN
0148-5598
DOI
10.1007/s10916-019-1242-4
Versión del editor
Aparece en las colecciones
Ficheros en el ítem
Nombre:
Advances in the Visualization and the Study of the Pyramidal Tract with Magnetic Resonance Tractography.pdfEmbargado hasta: 2099-09-09
Tamaño:
5.101Mb
Formato:
Adobe PDF













