Abstract

The human hippocampus plays a key role in memory management and is one of the first structures affected by Alzheimer’s disease. Ultra-high magnetic resonance imaging provides access to its inner structure in vivo. However, gradient limitations on clinical systems hinder access to its inner connectivity and microstructure. A major target of this paper is the demonstration of diffusion MRI potential, using ultra-high field (11.7 T) and strong gradients (750 mT/m), to reveal the extra- and intra-hippocampal connectivity in addition to its microstructure. To this purpose, a multiple-shell diffusion-weighted acquisition protocol was developed to reach an ultra-high spatio-angular resolution with a good signal-to-noise ratio. The MRI data set was analyzed using analytical Q-Ball Imaging, Diffusion Tensor Imaging (DTI), and Neurite Orientation Dispersion and Density Imaging models. High Angular Resolution Diffusion Imaging estimates allowed us to obtain an accurate tractography resolving more complex fiber architecture than DTI models, and subsequently provided a map of the cross-regional connectivity. The neurite density was akin to that found in the histological literature, revealing the three hippocampal layers. Moreover, a gradient of connectivity and neurite density was observed between the anterior and the posterior part of the hippocampus. These results demonstrate that ex vivo ultra-high field/ultra-high gradients diffusion-weighted MRI allows the mapping of the inner connectivity of the human hippocampus, its microstructure, and to accurately reconstruct elements of the polysynaptic intra-hippocampal pathway using fiber tractography techniques at very high spatial/angular resolutions.

Highlights

  • The human hippocampal formation plays a critical role in learning and memory

  • We demonstrate on a human medial temporal lobe sample that ex vivo ultra-high field with strong gradients Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) at 11.7 T and 780 mT/m gives the opportunity to map the complex anatomy of the hippocampus, and its inner connectivity and its organization at the mesoscopic scale

  • A three-dimensional rendering of the manual segmentation of the hippocampal regions and layers as well as of the entorhinal cortex is available in Supplementary Material

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Summary

Introduction

The human hippocampal formation plays a critical role in learning and memory. Anterior–posterior (ventral–dorsal in rodents) functional differences within the hippocampal formation have been reported in humans and experimental animals (Fanselow and Dong 2010; Poppenk et al 2013), detailed anatomical studies are still not available. The boundaries between different hippocampal subfields have been described in the neuroanatomy literature using cytoarchitectonic features that require histological staining and microscopic resolution to visualize (Gloor 1997; Amaral and Insausti 1990; Duvernoy 2005), but there are still discrepancies concerning whether it makes sense to separate some regions or not

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