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Abstract
The hypothalamus is a small structure of the brain with an essential role in metabolic homeostasis, sleep regulation, and body temperature control. Some neurodegenerative diseases such as amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) and dementia syndromes are reported to be related to hypothalamic volume alterations. Despite its crucial role in human body regulation, neuroimaging studies of this structure are rather scarce due to work-intensive operator-dependent manual delineations from MRI and lack of automated segmentation tools. In this study we present a fully automatic approach based on deep convolutional neural networks (CNN) for hypothalamic segmentation and volume quantification. We applied CNN of U-Net architecture with EfficientNetB0 backbone to allow for accurate automatic hypothalamic segmentation in seconds on a GPU. We further applied our approach for the quantification of the normalized hypothalamic volumes to a large neuroimaging dataset of 432 ALS patients and 112 healthy controls (without the ground truth labels). Using the automated volumetric analysis, we could reproduce hypothalamic atrophy findings associated with ALS by detecting significant volume differences between ALS patients and controls at the group level. In conclusion, a fast and unbiased AI-assisted hypothalamic quantification method is introduced in this study (whose acceptance rate based on the outlier removal strategy was estimated to be above 95%) and made publicly available for researchers interested in the conduction of hypothalamus studies at a large scale.
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Details
1 Ulm University Medical Center, Department of Internal Medicine II, Ulm, Germany (GRID:grid.6582.9) (ISNI:0000 0004 1936 9748)
2 University of Ulm, Department of Neurology, Ulm, Germany (GRID:grid.6582.9) (ISNI:0000 0004 1936 9748)
3 University of Ulm, Department of Neurology, Ulm, Germany (GRID:grid.6582.9) (ISNI:0000 0004 1936 9748); German Center for Neurodegenerative Diseases (DZNE), Ulm, Germany (GRID:grid.424247.3) (ISNI:0000 0004 0438 0426)
4 Ulm University Medical Center, Department of Internal Medicine II, Ulm, Germany (GRID:grid.6582.9) (ISNI:0000 0004 1936 9748); University of Ulm, Core Facility Small Animal MRI, Ulm, Germany (GRID:grid.6582.9) (ISNI:0000 0004 1936 9748)