C-PALSY Archives

Cerebral Palsy List

C-PALSY@LISTSERV.ICORS.ORG

Options: Use Forum View

Use Monospaced Font
Show Text Part by Default
Show All Mail Headers

Message: [<< First] [< Prev] [Next >] [Last >>]
Topic: [<< First] [< Prev] [Next >] [Last >>]
Author: [<< First] [< Prev] [Next >] [Last >>]

Print Reply
Subject:
From:
Meir Weiss <[log in to unmask]>
Reply To:
Cerebral Palsy List <[log in to unmask]>
Date:
Mon, 26 Jun 2006 10:51:17 -0400
Content-Type:
text/plain
Parts/Attachments:
text/plain (115 lines)
June 1, 2006 - Volume 38 Number 18
McGill's brain-imaging database a first

http://www.mcgill.ca/reporter/38/18/evans/ 
     McGill's brain-imaging database a first
Technology takes guesswork out of data collection
Michael Bourguignon

Alan Evans is almost giddy as he counts down to the launch of the world's first
online brain-imaging database, which will allow scientists to better understand
how the human brain develops.

"I've been at McGill for 23 years, and I don't think I've ever felt this kind of
buzz. It's been just a perfect storm of data, people and the Zeitgeist of the
field," said Evans, a biomedical engineering professor at the Montreal
Neurological Institute and the Principal Investigator of the Data Coordinating
Centre for the MRI Study of Normal Brain Development.

To build the database, researchers at six American pediatric study centres
collected three-dimensional Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI) scans of more than
500 children, from newborns to aged18, who had no neurological disorders. The
database will be made available to the worldwide scientific community via a
website scheduled to go online in August.

Kids' brains scanned for baseline
 
TZIGANE  
 
Each child's brain was scanned a minimum of once every two years over a period
of six years - more often for younger, more rapidly developing children. The
data will provide a point of comparison for researchers interested in observing
how a healthy brain develops, as opposed to a brain affected by a neurological
disorder such as autism or child-onset schizophrenia.

Such data has never been available before, largely because the technology didn't
exist.

"What used to be called fishing is now called data mining. We now have the
technology to collect vast amounts of data and incredibly powerful computers
capable of handling it," said Evans. "As a colleague of mine said to me, we're
not fishing anymore. We're stocking the lake. This changes the whole way of
approaching science."

Work on the database started in 2000, after the U.S. National Institutes of
Health, funders of the project, decided that existing neurological studies were
often too small in scale and tended to rely on "populations of convenience" -
the subjects were typically the friends or relatives of researchers.

The MNI was chosen to lead the project because of its expertise in the
relatively new field of brain imaging, Evans said.

To ensure the validity of the data, the researchers enlisted Info U.S.A., a
marketing agency, to provide a representative sampling of potential candidates
using demographic information from the U.S. Census Bureau.

A mailing was first sent out to prospective families asking them if they would
be willing to take part in the project. Those families who expressed interest
entered the first stage of a rigorous screening process that included interviews
and neurological examinations. They would go on to subsequent stages only if
they met all the demographic, medical and other selection criteria. Children
were excluded if their mothers smoked more than half a pack of cigarettes a day
during pregnancy, for instance. In two cases, the children were removed from the
project and immediately referred to a pediatric neurologist after they were
found to have major structural brain abnormalities.

The recruitment process was anything but easy, Evans admitted.

"We had to convince parents to bring in their children, who had nothing wrong
with them, to get their brains scanned. Getting them all to agree was a hell of
a job. There was a lot of cold-calling."

The result of all this time and effort is a unique collection of downloadable
images and behavioural data mapping the physiological changes that occur as
healthy, normal brains develop.

"This will allow work to be done that was inconceivable in the past," said
Bradley Peterson, director of MRI research at Columbia University and the New
York State Pyschiatric Institute, who was among the advisors who helped set the
parameters of the database project. "Understanding how things go right helps us
to understand how they go wrong. When you're studying patients with attention
deficit hyperactivity disorder, obsessive compulsive disorder, anxiety or
depression - all the important conditions in childhood - having a set of control
images of normal brain development will be extremely valuable."

The total budget is about $30 million, of which $9 million funded the work done
at McGill, where the software program that runs the database was designed. The
other institutions involved in the project are the Children's Hospital in
Boston, the Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center, the University of
Texas Houston Medical School, the Neuropsychiatric Institute and Hospital, the
University of California Los Angeles (UCLA), the Children's Hospital of
Philadelphia and Washington University in St. Louis, Missouri.

Once the database is officially "released" for use by scientists the world over
in August, McGill and the MNI will be credited more and more frequently as
sources of expertise for the most important breakthroughs in neurological
research. "We could be analyzing this data for the next 50 years," said Evans.
 
     
Public and media > McGill Reporter > Volume 38: 2005-2006 > June 1, 2006 >
McGill's brain-imaging database a first  
   McGill Reporter [Unit detail]
Burnside Hall [Map], Room 110, 805 Sherbrooke Street West, Montreal, Quebec H3A
2K6
Tel.: 514-398-5668 | Fax: 514-398-7364 | [Email]  Copyright 2006
McGill University

 
   

-----------------------

To change your mail settings or leave the C-PALSY list, go here:

http://listserv.icors.org/SCRIPTS/WA-ICORS.EXE?SUBED1=c-palsy

ATOM RSS1 RSS2