Katja Reimann
Max Planck Society
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Featured researches published by Katja Reimann.
NeuroImage | 2014
Carsten Stüber; Markus Morawski; Andreas Schäfer; Christian Labadie; Miriam Wähnert; Christoph Leuze; Markus Streicher; Nirav Barapatre; Katja Reimann; Stefan Geyer; D. Spemann; Robert Turner
During the last five years ultra-high-field magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) has enabled an unprecedented view of living human brain. Brain tissue contrast in most MRI sequences is known to reflect mainly the spatial distributions of myelin and iron. These distributions have been shown to overlap significantly in many brain regions, especially in the cortex. It is of increasing interest to distinguish and identify cortical areas by their appearance in MRI, which has been shown to be feasible in vivo. Parcellation can benefit greatly from quantification of the independent contributions of iron and myelin to MRI contrast. Recent studies using susceptibility mapping claim to allow such a separation of the effects of myelin and iron in MRI. We show, using post-mortem human brain tissue, that this goal can be achieved. After MRI scanning of the block with appropriate T1 mapping and T2* weighted sequences, we section the block and apply a novel technique, proton induced X-ray emission (PIXE), to spatially map iron, phosphorus and sulfur elemental concentrations, simultaneously with 1μm spatial resolution. Because most brain phosphorus is located in myelin phospholipids, a calibration step utilizing element maps of sulfur enables semi-quantitative ex vivo mapping of myelin concentration. Combining results for iron and myelin concentration in a linear model, we have accurately modeled MRI tissue contrasts. Conversely, iron and myelin concentrations can now be estimated from appropriate MRI measurements in post-mortem brain samples.
Frontiers in Human Neuroscience | 2011
Stefan Geyer; Marcel Weiss; Katja Reimann; Gabriele Lohmann; Robert Turner
The year 2009 marked the 100th anniversary of the publication of the famous brain map of Korbinian Brodmann. Although a “classic” guide to microanatomical parcellation of the cerebral cortex, it is – from todays state-of-the-art neuroimaging perspective – problematic to use Brodmanns map as a structural guide to functional units in the cortex. In this article we discuss some of the reasons, especially the problematic compatibility of the “post-mortem world” of microstructural brain maps with the “in vivo world” of neuroimaging. We conclude with some prospects for the future of in vivo structural brain mapping: a new approach which has the enormous potential to make direct correlations between microstructure and function in living human brains: “in vivo Brodmann mapping” with high-field magnetic resonance imaging.
Cerebral Cortex | 2014
Christoph Leuze; Pierre Louis Bazin; Bibek Dhital; Carsten Stüber; Katja Reimann; Stefan Geyer; Robert Turner
In this work, we show for the first time that the tangential diffusion component is orientationally coherent at the human cortical surface. Using diffusion magnetic resonance imaging (dMRI), we have succeeded in tracking intracortical fiber pathways running tangentially within the cortex. In contrast with histological methods, which reveal little regarding 3-dimensional organization in the human brain, dMRI delivers additional understanding of the layer dependence of the fiber orientation. A postmortem brain block was measured at very high angular and spatial resolution. The dMRI data had adequate resolution to allow analysis of the fiber orientation within 4 notional cortical laminae. We distinguished a lamina at the cortical surface where diffusion was tangential along the surface, a lamina below the surface where diffusion was mainly radial, an internal lamina covering the Stria of Gennari, where both strong radial and tangential diffusion could be observed, and a deep lamina near the white matter, which also showed mainly radial diffusion with a few tangential compartments. The measurement of the organization of the tangential diffusion component revealed a strong orientational coherence at the cortical surface.
Human Brain Mapping | 2014
Gilles de Hollander; Max C. Keuken; Pierre-Louis Bazin; Marcel Weiss; Jane Neumann; Katja Reimann; Miriam Wähnert; Robert Turner; Birte U. Forstmann; Andreas Schäfer
The subthalamic nucleus (STN) is an important node of the cortico‐basal ganglia network and the main target of deep brain stimulation (DBS) in Parkinsons disease. Histological studies have revealed an inhomogeneous iron distribution within the STN, which has been related to putative subdivisions within this nucleus. Here, we investigate the iron distribution in more detail using quantitative susceptibility mapping (QSM), a novel magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) contrast mechanism. QSM allows for detailed assessment of iron content in both in vivo and postmortem tissue. Twelve human participants and 7 postmortem brain samples containing the STN were scanned using ultra‐high field 7 Tesla (T) MRI. Iron concentrations were found to be higher in the medial‐inferior tip of the STN. Using quantitative methods we show that the increase of iron concentration towards the medial‐inferior tip is of a gradual rather than a discrete nature. Hum Brain Mapp 35:4440–4449, 2014.
ISMRM 19th Annual Meeting | 2011
Carsten Stüber; Markus Morawski; Katja Reimann; Nirav Barapatre; Stefan Geyer; Robert Turner
24th Annual Meeting of the International Society for Magnetic Resonance in Medicine (ISMRM) | 2016
Evgeniya Kirilina; Markus Morawski; Katja Reimann; Juliane Dinse; Pierre-Louis Bazin; Stefan Geyer; Robert Trampel; Larissa Müller; Steffen Jankuhn; Andreas Deistung; Nikolaus Weiskopf
Toward a Super-Big Brain: Promisses and Pitfalls of Microstructural Imaging | 2016
Evgeniya Kirilina; Markus Morawski; Katja Reimann; Larissa Müller; Norbert Jakubowski; Steffen Jankuhn; Nikolaus Weiskopf
F1000Research | 2014
Christoph Leuze; Pierre-Louis Bazin; Miriam Waehnert; Katja Reimann; Stefan Geyer; Robert Turner
Archive | 2011
Stefan Geyer; Marcel Weiss; Katja Reimann; Gabriele Lohmann; Robert Turner
ESMRMB CONGRESS 2011, 28th Annual Scientific Meeting | 2011
Christoph Leuze; Bibek Dhital; Stefan Geyer; Robin M. Heidemann; Katja Reimann; Marcel Gratz; Robert Turner