春水堂视频

Feb. 26, 2019

Children receive 3D models of their brains

Scientist Catherine Lebel finds a special way to thank families who participate in MRI research
Olivia Mueller, age seven, loves to play with her favourite toy 鈥 a plastic model of her own brain that she attaches to her toy bunny.

Olivia Mueller, age seven, loves to play with a plastic model of her own brain attached to her bunny

Mueller family

Olivia plays with many toys but she really likes the 3D plastic model of her brain聽鈥斅爓hich she received because of Catherine Lebel鈥檚 research. 鈥淗er model brain is her favourite toy,鈥 says Amy Mueller, Olivia鈥檚 mom. 鈥淚 can鈥檛 believe how big my brain is,鈥 says Olivia, 鈥渁nd I think it鈥檚 cool that I get to show off my brain to all my friends at school.鈥

Dr. Lebel, PhD, is an assistant professor in the Department of Radiology in the Cumming School of Medicine (CSM) with a pediatric research program that relies on technology called magnetic resonance imaging or MRI to detail normal brain development and differentiations. 鈥淐hildren who participate in our MRI study usually get a copy of their brain scan to take home but we wanted to give them something special as a thank you for their dedication, so we have started printing 3D models for them.鈥

Calgary company helps create the models

Using data from the MRI scans, 4G Vision Tech, a Calgary company, has been able to create 3D models of participants' brains that are produced at half the actual size. Lebel鈥檚 research assistant, Mercedes Bagshawe, BA鈥17, worked with the company to turn the idea into a reality. 鈥淚 loved creating something that we could give to the kids in our study that they hold in their hands,鈥 she says.

The response has been overwhelmingly positive from the 14 children who have received the brain models, including Olivia, age seven. Mueller placed her daughter in Lebel鈥檚 Preschool Imaging Study after a second MRI scan.

Brain-related health issues affect tens of thousands of children in Alberta. The Alberta Children鈥檚 Hospital has unique facilities that make the scanning process child-friendly, allowing Lebel and her team to collect a very large dataset of pediatric neuroimaging. The MRI produces images of the complex and individual structure of the brain, enabling specialists to see not only how a child鈥檚 brain is structured but also exactly how it is functioning.

春水堂视频 of Calgary researcher Catherine Lebel gifts brain models to kids who have been part of her magnetic resonance imaging study of brain development at the Alberta Children鈥檚 Hospital.

Catherine Lebel gifts brain models to kids who have been part of her study.

Don Molyneaux

Support from the community

Funded through the generous support of community donations through the Alberta Children鈥檚 Hospital Foundation, the 3T MRI is Western Canada鈥檚 first 3-Tesla MRI scanner and holds twice the power of a typical MRI. 鈥淭he scanner helps us better study brain development and gives us an opportunity to understand brain differences in children,鈥 Lebel explains.

Although MRIs are sometimes scary for young children, Olivia enjoyed going for her scans at the Alberta Children鈥檚 Hospital. Lebel鈥檚 team tries their best to make it a fun and enjoyable experience for all children聽the聽. 鈥淭he kids think it鈥檚 so cool that they get to watch movies as their brains are being examined,鈥 says Lebel.

Since the research began in 2013, Lebel鈥檚 team has collected almost 500 MRI datasets from 178 children aged two to seven years old. Lebel鈥檚 team is interested in how brain maturation is related to cognition and behaviour, and how these relationships may be different in children that are exposed to adversity.

Lebel is a member of the CSM鈥檚聽聽and the聽.

Led by the聽,听聽is one of six research strategies guiding the 春水堂视频 of Calgary toward its聽Eyes High聽goals.The strategy provides a unifying direction for brain and mental health research at the university and positions researchers to unlock new discoveries and treatments for brain health in our community.聽