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Personalizing Brain Pathology Analysis Using Temporal Resting State fMRI Signal Complexity Analysis.

Assessment of diffuse brain disorders, where the brain may appear normal, has proven difficult to translate into personalized treatments. Previous methods based on brain magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) resting state blood oxygen level dependent (rs-BOLD) signal routinely rely on group analysis where large data sets are assessed using region-of interest (ROI) or probabilistic independent component analysis (PICA) to identify temporal synchrony or desynchrony among regions of the brain.

Brain connectivity occurs in a complex, multilevel and multi-temporal manner, driving the fluctuations observed in local oxygen demand. These fluctuations have previously been characterized as fractal, as they auto-correlate at different time scales. In this study we propose a model-free complexity analysis based on the fractal dimension of the rs-BOLD signal, acquired with MRI. The fractal dimension can be interpreted as a measure of signal complexity and connectivity. Previous studies have suggested that reduction in signal complexity can be associated with disease. Therefore, we hypothesized that a detectable differences in rs-BOLD signal complexity could be observed between patients with diffuse or heterogeneous brain disorders and healthy controls.

In this study, we obtained anatomical and functional data from patients with brain disorders where traditional methods have been insufficient to fully assess the condition. More specifically, we tested our method on mild traumatic brain injury, autism spectrum disorder, chemotherapy-induced cognitive impairment and chronic fatigue syndrome patients.
Three major databases from the Neuroimaging Informatics Tools and Resources Clearinghouse (NITRC) project were used to acquire large numbers of age matched healthy controls. Healthy control data was downloaded from the the Autism Brain Imaging Data Exchange (ABIDE), the Alzheimer's Disease Neuroimaging Initiative (ADNI) and the Human Connectome Project specifically matching our experimental design.

In all of our studies, the voxel-wise rs-BOLD signal fractal dimension was calculated following a procedure described by Eke and Herman et al. 2000. This method was previously used to assess brain rs-BOLD signal in small mammals and humans. The method consists of estimating the Hurst exponent in the frequency domain using a power spectral density approach and refining the estimation in the time domain with de-trended fluctuation analysis and signal summation conversion methods. Voxel-wise fractal dimension (FD) was then calculated for every subject in the control and patient groups to create ROI-based Z-scores for each individual patient. Voxel-wise validation of FD normality across controls was studied and non-Gaussian voxels, determined using kurtosis and skewness calculations, were eliminated from subsequent analysis. To maintain a 95 % confidence level, only regions where Z-score values were at least 2 standard deviations away from the mean were included in the analysis. In the case of chronic fatigue patients and chemotherapy induced cognitive impairment, DTI analysis was added to also determine whether white matter abnormalities were also relevent. Similar Z-score analysis on DTI metrics was also performed.

Brain microscopic networks, modeled as complex systems, become affected in diffuse brain disorders. Z-scoring of the fractal rs-BOLD frequency domain delineated patient-specific regional brain anomalies which correlated with patient-specific symptoms. This technique can be used alone, or in combination with DTI Z-scoring, to characterize a single patient without any need for group analysis, making it ideal for personalized diagnostics. / Thesis / Doctor of Philosophy (PhD)

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:mcmaster.ca/oai:macsphere.mcmaster.ca:11375/21451
Date06 1900
CreatorsDona Lemus, Olga M.
ContributorsNoseworthy, Michael D., Biomedical Engineering
Source SetsMcMaster University
Detected LanguageEnglish
TypeThesis

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