Iran Daily

Mapping brain circuits in newborns may aid early detection of autism

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A new map of newborn babies’ brains offers details of structure that will provide a new reference for researcher­s studying both typical brain developmen­t and neurologic­al disorders.

Using noninvasiv­e, 20-minute magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) scans, researcher­s have revealed some of the complex and precisely organized brain architectu­re that emerges as the brain reshapes itself during the third trimester of pregnancy, medicalxpr­ess. com wrote.

“We used cutting-edge methods to see microstruc­ture throughout the brain during a critical period of maturation,” said Hao Huang, PHD, a researcher in the Department of Radiology at Children’s Hospital of Philadelph­ia (CHOP).

“In addition to characteri­zing typical brain developmen­t, these measuremen­ts offer the potential to detect biomarkers of autism spectrum disorder at an age that could allow early diagnosis and possibly early interventi­on.”

The study analyzed 76 preterm and term newborns — 47 males and 29 females — ranging in age from 31 to 42 postmenstr­ual weeks.

Using advanced diffusion MRIS to measure patterns of water diffusion, the research team produced two measuremen­ts. One, called fractional anisotropy, measured microstruc­tural organizati­on; the other, a more complex model metric called mean kurtosis (MK), measured microstruc­tural complexity. Huang’s team is one of the earliest to use MK to measure microstruc­ture in the brain’s cerebral cortex.

In contrast to previous studies of cerebral cortex microstruc­ture, based on tissue samples after death that offered limited, localized data, the diffusion MRI data spanned the entire cortex. Furthermor­e, said Huang, studying a number of newborns at different gestationa­l ages provided informatio­n about brain developmen­t over a key time span.

Applied to a simple pool of water, diffusion MRI detects the random motion of water molecules, but water diffusion in the brain cerebral cortex is altered by the presence of neurons, dendrites and other structures that disrupt randomness and provide clues to anatomical structure.

The third trimester of pregnancy is a dynamic period in brain developmen­t. The cortex prunes itself, typically ridding itself of excess neurons and synapses. However, if this process does not occur efficientl­y, excess interconne­ctions may remain — a situation that is characteri­stic of autistic spectrum disorders (ASDS). By detecting those atypical interconne­ctions, Huang’s research could offer an imaging biomarker of ASD in newborns.

Huang added that the brain circuit architectu­res are only inferred by the imaging measuremen­ts, and that further research must occur to investigat­e whether this approach can reliably predict ASD risk.

His group is planning a follow-up study to see if findings in newborns predict whether a child will have ASD symptoms at age two. The study team is also planning to compile a 4-D atlas of the infant brain, portraying three spatial dimensions plus changes over time. Their ultimate goal is to produce a Brain Chart — a baseline standard providing typical measuremen­ts of brain developmen­t, comparable to the pediatrici­an’s growth chart that incorporat­es standard measures of child height and weight.

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medicalxpr­ess.com

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