Mapping neurological disease

MIT researchers have developed an algorithm that can analyze information from medical images to identify diseased areas of the brain and their connections with other regions.
 
Disorders such as schizophrenia can originate in certain regions of the brain and then spread out to affect connected areas. Identifying these regions of the brain, and how they affect the other areas they communicate with, would allow drug companies to develop better treatments and could ultimately help doctors make a diagnosis. But interpreting the vast amounts of data produced by brain scans to identify these connecting regions has so far proved impossible.
 
The algorithm, developed in the Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence Laboratory by Polina Golland, an associate professor of computer science, and graduate student Archana Venkataraman, extracts information from two different types of magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) scans.
 
Diffusion MRI looks at how water diffuses along the white-matter fibers in the brain, providing insight into how closely different areas are connected to one another. And functional MRI (fMRI), probes how different parts of the brain activate when they perform particular tasks, and so can reveal when two areas are active at the same time and are therefore connected.
 
These two scans alone can produce huge amounts of data on the network of connections in the brain, Golland says. “It’s quite hard for a person looking at all of that data to integrate it into a model of what is going on, because we’re not good at processing lots of numbers.”
 
The algorithm first compares all the data from the brain scans of healthy people with those of patients with a particular disease, to identify differences in the connections between the two groups that indicate disruptions caused by the disorder. However, this step alone is not enough, since much of our understanding of what goes on in the brain concerns the individual regions themselves, rather than the connections between them, making it difficult to integrate this information with existing medical knowledge.
 
So the algorithm then analyzes this network of connections to create a map of the areas of the brain most affected by the disease. “It is based on the assumption that with any disease you get a small subset of regions that are affected, which then affect their neighbors through this connectivity change,” Golland says. “So our methods extract from the data this set of regions that can explain the disruption of connectivity that we see.”
 
It does this by hypothesizing, based on an overall map of the connections between each of the regions in the brain, what disruptions in signaling it would expect to see if a particular region were affected. In this way, when the algorithm detects any disruption in connectivity in a particular scan, it knows which regions must have been affected by the disease to create such an impact. “It basically finds the subset of regions that best explains the observed changes in connectivity between the normal control scan and the patient scan,” Golland says.
 
When the team used the algorithm to compare the brain scans of patients with schizophrenia to those of healthy people, they were able to identify three regions of the brain — the right posterior cingulate and the right and left superior temporal gyri — that are most affected by the disease.