Hi Matthieu,

I've taken a look through the files you shared with us and I see the poor 
surfaces in the posterior right hemisphere you were referring to in your 
message. It looks like your subject has a combination of abnormally large 
ventricles and significant wm abnormalities, so I'm surprised FreeSurfer did as 
well as it did.


As for the recon editing - I would recommend editing the wm.mgz to more 
accurately represent the wm from slice 84 to 39. You can take a look at the 
white matter edits 
tutorial<https://surfer.nmr.mgh.harvard.edu/fswiki/FsTutorial/WhiteMatterEditsV6.0>
 for details on how to do that. Then run the following command (substituting 
<subj_id> for your subject's id):


recon-all -autorecon2-wm -autorecon3 -subjid <subj_id>


The surface reconstruction may also benefit from labeling the right lateral 
ventricle in the wm.mgz (as an intensity of 250) - but I'm not certain since 
you didn't send us the surfaces for the left hemisphere. Before you do that, 
edit the wm.mgz as explained in the tutorial and tell us how that goes.


All the best,

Bram


Bram R. Diamond, BSc
Research Technician II
Laboratory for Computational Neuroimaging
Martinos Center for Biomedical Imaging
Massachusetts General Hospital
149 13th Street
Charlestown, MA 02129
(p): 617-726-6598

_______________________________________________
Freesurfer mailing list
Freesurfer@nmr.mgh.harvard.edu
https://mail.nmr.mgh.harvard.edu/mailman/listinfo/freesurfer


The information in this e-mail is intended only for the person to whom it is
addressed. If you believe this e-mail was sent to you in error and the e-mail
contains patient information, please contact the Partners Compliance HelpLine at
http://www.partners.org/complianceline . If the e-mail was sent to you in error
but does not contain patient information, please contact the sender and properly
dispose of the e-mail.

Reply via email to