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Diffusion MRI (DTI) in Neurodegeneration

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Diffusion MRI (DTI) in Neurodegeneration

Introduction

Diffusion Tensor Imaging (DTI) is a specialized magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) technique that measures the Brownian motion of water molecules in biological tissues. By quantifying the directional dependence of water diffusion, DTI provides unique insights into white matter microstructure and neural connectivity that are not available from conventional T1-weighted or T2-weighted imaging sequences. DTI has become an indispensable tool in neurodegenerative disease research and clinical diagnostics, enabling researchers and clinicians to detect microstructural changes years before they become visible on conventional MRI scans[@alexander2007].

The fundamental principle underlying DTI is that water molecules move randomly in a process known as Brownian motion. However, in biological tissues such as brain white matter, this random motion is constrained by cellular structures including axonal membranes, myelin sheaths, and microtubules. This constraint results in anisotropic diffusion—water molecules move more rapidly along the direction of axonal fibers than perpendicular to them. By measuring this anisotropy, DTI provides indirect information about the integrity of white matter tracts[@assaf2008].

Physical Principles of Diffusion MRI

The Diffusion Tensor Model


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