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Multimodal characterization of the human nucleus accumbens
- Source :
- Neuroimage
- Publication Year :
- 2019
-
Abstract
- Dysregulation of the nucleus accumbens (NAc) is implicated in numerous neuropsychiatric disorders. Treatments targeting this area directly (e.g. deep brain stimulation) demonstrate variable efficacy, perhaps owing to non-specific targeting of a functionally heterogeneous nucleus. Here we provide support for this notion, first observing disparate behavioral effects in response to direct simulation of different locations within the NAc in a human patient. These observations motivate a segmentation of the NAc into subregions, which we produce from a diffusion-tractography based analysis of 245 young, unrelated healthy subjects. We further explore the mechanism of these stimulation-induced behavioral responses by identifying the most probable subset of axons activated using a patient-specific computational model. We validate our diffusion-based segmentation using evidence from several modalities, including MRI-based measures of function and microstructure, human post-mortem immunohistochemical staining, and cross-species comparison of cortical-NAc projections that are known to be conserved. Finally, we visualize the passage of individual axon bundles through one NAc subregion in a post-mortem human sample using CLARITY 3D histology corroborated by 7T tractography. Collectively, these findings extensively characterize human NAc subregions and provide insight into their structural and functional distinctions with implications for stereotactic treatments targeting this region.
- Subjects :
- Male
Deep brain stimulation
Cognitive Neuroscience
medicine.medical_treatment
Models, Neurological
Biology
Nucleus accumbens
050105 experimental psychology
Nucleus Accumbens
Article
03 medical and health sciences
Mice
0302 clinical medicine
Neural Pathways
medicine
Image Processing, Computer-Assisted
Animals
Humans
0501 psychology and cognitive sciences
Axon
Cerebral Cortex
Brain Mapping
Heterogeneous nucleus
Mechanism (biology)
05 social sciences
Healthy subjects
Axons
Electric Stimulation
medicine.anatomical_structure
Diffusion Tensor Imaging
Neurology
Female
Neuroscience
030217 neurology & neurosurgery
Function (biology)
Tractography
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 10959572
- Volume :
- 198
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- NeuroImage
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....40f50024dcdb2ebea8c1ce3e5caf87a7