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Abstract #2523

Spinal cord injury-induced changes in thoracolumbar microarchitecture: a semi-automated DTI pipeline for improved clinical translation

Georgia E. Bright1,2, Angela Walls3,4,5, Thorsten Feiweier6, Wickramaarchchigeige Lakshantha3,5,7, Patrick Stroman8,9,10, Jillian M. Clark1,2, and Ryan L. O'Hare Doig1,2,3,5
1School of Medicine, Faculty of Health and Medical Sciences, The University of Adelaide, Adelaide, Australia, 2Neil Sachse Centre for Spinal Cord Research, Lifelong Health Theme, South Australian Health and Medical Research Institute, Adelaide, Australia, 3Preclinical, Imaging and Research Laboratories, South Australian Health and Medical Research Institute, Adelaide, Australia, 4Clinical & Research Imaging Centre, South Australian Health and Medical Research Institute, Adelaide, Australia, 5National Imaging Facility, South Australian Node, Adelaide, Australia, 6Siemens Healthcare GmbH, Erlangen, Germany, 7Australian Cancer Research Foundation Molecular Theranostics Laboratory, Centenary Institute, Sydney, Australia, 8Centre for Neuroscience Studies, Queens University, Kingston, ON, Canada, 9Department of Biomedical and Molecular Sciences, Queens University, Kingston, ON, Canada, 10Department of Physics, Queens University, Kingston, ON, Canada

Synopsis

Keywords: Spinal Cord, Microstructure, Diffusion Tensor Imaging

Motivation: While diffusion tensor imaging (DTI) is sensitive to spinal cord injury (SCI)-induced microstructural changes, manual pre-processing of thoracolumbar spinal cord (TL-SC) data precludes its clinical translation.

Goal(s): We aimed to optimise a semi-automatic TL-SC DTI protocol to detect SCI-induced microarchitectural changes.

Approach: TL-SC DTI data from two participants with diagnosed SCI and six healthy volunteers were pre-processed to equate the TL-SC microarchitecture and then compared to semi-automated analysis.

Results: Our optimised TL-SC DTI acquisition and semi-automatic analysis pipeline is sensitive to SCI-induced microstructural changes and may provide a more clinically viable method for TL-SC DTI analysis.

Impact: This study assessed and validated our newly developed thoracolumbar spinal cord (TL-SC) diffusion tensor imaging (DTI) pipeline in detecting spinal cord injury (SCI)-induced microstructural changes and offers an alternative semi-automatic pre-processing method for improved clinical translation.

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Keywords