DocumentCode
2519952
Title
LOCALIZING AMYGDALA STRUCTURE DIFFERENCES IN LATE-LIFE DEPRESSION
Author
Tamburo, Robert J. ; Siegle, Greg J. ; Stetten, George D. ; Cois, C. Aaron ; Rockot, Ken J. ; Galeotti, John M. ; Reynolds, Charles F., III ; Aizenstein, Howard J.
Author_Institution
Dept. of Psychiatry, Pittsburgh Univ., PA
fYear
2007
fDate
12-15 April 2007
Firstpage
340
Lastpage
343
Abstract
The amygdala is critical for processing emotional information and plays an important role in late-life depression (LLD). Volumetric studies of the amygdala have been inconclusive with reports of increased, decreased, and no volume changes. This study investigates amygdala shape morphometry to test the hypothesis that if structural changes are specific to certain nuclei, then shape changes may be apparent even when overall volume changes are inconsistent. We have developed a method of shape morphometry based on the work of to localize regions of structural differences. The method relies on generating surface meshes for segmented amygdalae, calculating distances from surface points to the medial manifold, and comparing the distance measures at corresponding surface points between groups. Resulting statistical maps revealed significant structural differences in multiple regions of both amygdalae. Shape morphometry can potentially relate local structure variation to underlying neuroanatomy for a better understanding of LLD neuropathology
Keywords
biomedical MRI; biomedical measurement; brain; diseases; geriatrics; image segmentation; medical image processing; mesh generation; neurophysiology; psychology; shape measurement; statistical analysis; volume measurement; amygdala; emotional information processing; late-life depression; local structure variation; magnetic resonance imaging; neuroanatomy; neuroimaging; neuropathology; segmented amygdalae; shape morphometry; statistical maps; structure difference localization; surface mesh; surface points; volume morphometry; Biomedical imaging; Dementia; Magnetic resonance imaging; Medical diagnostic imaging; Psychology; Robots; Senior citizens; Shape control; Shape measurement; Testing;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Biomedical Imaging: From Nano to Macro, 2007. ISBI 2007. 4th IEEE International Symposium on
Conference_Location
Arlington, VA
Print_ISBN
1-4244-0672-2
Electronic_ISBN
1-4244-0672-2
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/ISBI.2007.356858
Filename
4193292
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