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      Radial coherence of diffusion tractography in the cerebral white matter of the human fetus: neuroanatomic insights.

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          Abstract

          High angular resolution diffusion imaging (HARDI) demonstrates transient radial coherence of telencephalic white matter in the human fetus. Our objective was to define the neuroanatomic basis of this radial coherence through correlative HARDI- and postmortem tissue analyses. Applying immunomarkers to radial glial fibers (RGFs), axons, and blood vessels in 18 cases (19 gestational weeks to 3 postnatal years), we compared their developmental profiles to HARDI tractography in brains of comparable ages (n = 11). At midgestation, radial coherence corresponded with the presence of RGFs. At 30-31 weeks, the transition from HARDI-defined radial coherence to corticocortical coherence began simultaneously with the transformation of RGFs to astrocytes. By term, both radial coherence and RGFs had disappeared. White matter axons were radial, tangential, and oblique over the second half of gestation, whereas penetrating blood vessels were consistently radial. Thus, radial coherence in the fetal white matter likely reflects a composite of RGFs, penetrating blood vessels, and radial axons of which its transient expression most closely matches that of RGFs. This study provides baseline information for interpreting radial coherence in tractography studies of the preterm brain in the assessment of the encephalopathy of prematurity.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          Cereb. Cortex
          Cerebral cortex (New York, N.Y. : 1991)
          1460-2199
          1047-3211
          Mar 2014
          : 24
          : 3
          Affiliations
          [1 ] Department of Pathology, Children's Hospital Boston, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA 02115, USA.
          Article
          bhs330
          10.1093/cercor/bhs330
          23131806
          aa5b9e80-cd2b-459b-8f02-f419f69a393d
          History

          axons,blood vessels,encephalopathy of prematurity,periventricular leukomalacia,radial glial fibers,vimentin

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