Brain MRI volumetrics
DEZerebrale MRT-Volumetrie
Reviewed by Maurice Lichtenberg
Brain MRI volumetrics uses structural magnetic resonance imaging to quantify the volume of specific brain regions — most notably the hippocampus, lateral ventricles and total grey- and white-matter — as well as cortical thickness across parcellated regions. Automated analysis pipelines such as FreeSurfer and the GPU-accelerated FastSurfer process T1-weighted images to generate normative deviation scores; larger ventricular volumes and reduced hippocampal or cortical thickness are established markers of accelerated brain ageing, with rates of atrophy increasing substantially after age 60. Cross-sectional population studies such as UK Biobank have mapped trajectories of regional volume loss against age, lifestyle factors and disease risk, enabling the concept of a 'brain age gap' — the difference between estimated brain age and chronological age — as a potential biomarker for neurodegenerative risk and cognitive resilience.
Sources
- Driscoll I, Davatzikos C, An Y, Wu X, Shen D, Kraut M, Resnick SM. (2009). Longitudinal pattern of regional brain volume change differentiates normal aging from MCI. *Neurology*doi:10.1212/wnl.0b013e3181a82634
- Gaser C, Franke K, Klöppel S, Koutsouleris N, Sauer H. (2013). BrainAGE in mild cognitive impaired patients: predicting the conversion to Alzheimer's disease. *PLoS ONE*doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0067346
