Paper ID: 2503.07177 • Published Mar 10, 2025
The 4D Human Embryonic Brain Atlas: spatiotemporal atlas generation for rapid anatomical changes using first-trimester ultrasound from the Rotterdam Periconceptional Cohort
TL;DR
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Early brain development is crucial for lifelong neurodevelopmental health.
However, current clinical practice offers limited knowledge of normal embryonic
brain anatomy on ultrasound, despite the brain undergoing rapid changes within
the time-span of days. To provide detailed insights into normal brain
development and identify deviations, we created the 4D Human Embryonic Brain
Atlas using a deep learning-based approach for groupwise registration and
spatiotemporal atlas generation. Our method introduced a time-dependent initial
atlas and penalized deviations from it, ensuring age-specific anatomy was
maintained throughout rapid development. The atlas was generated and validated
using 831 3D ultrasound images from 402 subjects in the Rotterdam
Periconceptional Cohort, acquired between gestational weeks 8 and 12. We
evaluated the effectiveness of our approach with an ablation study, which
demonstrated that incorporating a time-dependent initial atlas and penalization
produced anatomically accurate results. In contrast, omitting these adaptations
led to anatomically incorrect atlas. Visual comparisons with an existing
ex-vivo embryo atlas further confirmed the anatomical accuracy of our atlas. In
conclusion, the proposed method successfully captures the rapid anotomical
development of the embryonic brain. The resulting 4D Human Embryonic Brain
Atlas provides a unique insights into this crucial early life period and holds
the potential for improving the detection, prevention, and treatment of
prenatal neurodevelopmental disorders.
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