Abstract

Modeling of water diffusion in white matter is useful for revealing microstructure of the brain tissue and hence diagnosis and evaluation of white matter diseases. Researchers have modeled diffusion in white matter using mathematical and mechanical analysis at the cellular level. However, less work has been devoted to evaluate these models using macroscopic real data such as diffusion tensor magnetic resonance imaging (DTMRI) data. DTMRI is a noninvasive tool for evaluating white matter microstructure by measuring random motion of water molecules referred to as diffusion. It reflects directional information of microscopic structures such as fibers. Thus, it is applicable for evaluation and modification of mathematical models of white matter. Nevertheless, a realistic relation between a fiber model and imaging data does not exist. This work opens a promising avenue for relating DTMRI data to microstructural parameters of white matter. First, we propose a strategy for relating DTMRI and fiber model parameters to evaluate mathematical models in light of real data. The proposed strategy is then applied to evaluate and extend an existing model of white matter based on clinically available DTMRI data. Next, the proposed strategy is used to estimate microstructural characteristics of fiber tracts. We illustrate this approach through its application to approximation of myelin sheath thickness and fraction of volume occupied by fibers. Using sufficiently small imaging voxels, the proposed approach is capable of estimating model parameters with desirable precision.

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