Bridging the microstructural gap in human connectomics using hierarchical phase-contrast tomography as a reference for diffusion MRI in the human brain
Wanjau, E.; Chourrout, M.; Maffei, C.; Balbastre, Y.; Keenlyside, A.; Brunet, J.; Sharma, A.; Huang, S. Y.; Tafforeau, P.; Fischl, B.; Yendiki, A.; Lee, P. D.; Walsh, C.
Show abstract
Diffusion MRI (dMRI) allows us to image the human connectome non-invasively, yet it provides indirect estimates of axonal orientations based on the diffusion of water molecules in millimeter-scale voxels, hence struggling to resolve complex micrometer-scale fiber geometries. Invasive methods for imaging axonal orientations ex vivo, e.g. histology, are destructive and limited to small volumes, creating a critical need for a non-destructive modality for imaging microscopic fiber orientations in 3D. Here, we use Hierarchical Phase-Contrast Tomography (HiP-CT) to characterize white matter architecture at the microscale. Applying structure-tensor analysis to HiP-CT data, we compute fiber Orientation Distribution Functions and perform tractography analogous to dMRI. Across multiple brain regions, HiP-CT derived fiber architecture shows strong correspondence with that derived from dMRI while revealing substantially greater microstructural complexity. Despite its label-free nature, we demonstrate that vascular structures minimally confound HiP-CT orientation estimates. These results establish HiP-CT as a reference microscopic modality that can complement dMRI in multi-scale studies of white-matter organization.
Matching journals
The top 3 journals account for 50% of the predicted probability mass.