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1.
Front Genet ; 3: 65, 2012.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22558002

RÉSUMÉ

BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: We hypothesized that the P-selectin (SELP) gene, localized to a region on chromosome 1q24, pleiotropically contributes to increased blood pressure and cerebral atrophy. We tested this hypothesis by performing genetic correlation analyses for 13 mRNA gene expression measures from P-selectin and 11 other genes located in 1q24 region and three magnetic resonance imaging derived indices of cerebral integrity. METHODS: The subject pool consisted of 369 (219F; aged 28-85, average = 47.1 ± 12.7 years) normally aging, community-dwelling members of large extended Mexican-American families. Genetic correlation analysis decomposed phenotypic correlation coefficients into genetic and environmental components among 13 leukocyte-based mRNA gene expressions and three whole-brain and regional measurements of cerebral integrity: cortical gray matter thickness, fractional anisotropy of cerebral white matter, and the volume of hyperintensive WM lesions. RESULTS: From the 13 gene expressions, significant phenotypic correlations were only found for the P- and L-selectin expression levels. Increases in P-selectin expression levels tracked with decline in cerebral integrity while the opposite trend was observed for L-selectin expression. The correlations for the P-selectin expression were driven by shared genetic factors, while the correlations with L-selectin expression were due to shared environmental effects. CONCLUSION: This study demonstrated that P-selectin expression shared a significant variance with measurements of cerebral integrity and posits elevated P-selectin expression levels as a potential risk factor of hypertension-related cerebral atrophy.

2.
Mol Psychiatry ; 10(1): 27-39, 2005 Jan.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-15340352

RÉSUMÉ

The discovery of the pathophysiology(ies) for schizophrenia is necessary to direct rational treatment directions for this brain disorder. Firm knowledge about this illness is limited to areas of phenomenology, clinical electrophysiology, and genetic risk; some aspects of dopamine pharmacology, cognitive symptoms, and risk genes are known. Basic questions remain about diagnostic heterogeneity, tissue neurochemistry, and in vivo brain function. It is an illness ripe for molecular characterization using a rational approach with a confirmatory strategy; drug discovery based on knowledge is the only way to advance fully effective treatments. This paper reviews the status of general knowledge in this area and proposes an approach to discovery, including identifying brain regions of dysfunction and subsequent localized, hypothesis-driven molecular screening.


Sujet(s)
Chimie du cerveau/physiologie , Encéphale/physiopathologie , Phénotype , Schizophrénie/physiopathologie , Psychologie des schizophrènes , Symptômes comportementaux , Monoamines biogènes/métabolisme , Encéphale/métabolisme , Encéphale/anatomopathologie , Prédisposition génétique à une maladie , Acide glutamique/métabolisme , Gyrus du cingulum/métabolisme , Gyrus du cingulum/anatomopathologie , Gyrus du cingulum/physiopathologie , Hippocampe/métabolisme , Hippocampe/anatomopathologie , Hippocampe/physiopathologie , Humains , Système limbique/métabolisme , Système limbique/physiopathologie , Modèles neurologiques , Schizophrénie/génétique , Schizophrénie/métabolisme
3.
Hippocampus ; 11(5): 543-50, 2001.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11732707

RÉSUMÉ

Regional cerebral blood flow (rCBF) data from two PET-15O water schizophrenia studies were analyzed using individually placed, magnetic resonance (MR)-guided hippocampal volumes of interest (VOI). In one study, normal (N = 10) and schizophrenic (N = 18) volunteers performed an overlearned auditory discrimination task in rest, control, and decision conditions. In the other study, schizophrenic and normal volunteers received the noncompetitive NMDA receptor antagonist ketamine and placebo and had sequential rCBF evaluations. Moreover, the schizophrenic volunteers were off drug in one study and on antipsychotic drug in the second study, allowing an additional comparison of medication status. VOIs were placed on anterior, middle, and posterior hippocampal areas in each PET image from both studies, redirected from an MR scan, and individually adjusted. While no hippocampal activation was apparent in either the normal or schizophrenic group in the task vs. condition comparison, rCBF was higher in the schizophrenic than in the normal hippocampus in both task and control conditions, independently. In addition, at rest rCBF was significantly higher in the unmedicated group of schizophrenics than in the group of medicated patient volunteers and higher than in the normal comparison group. This suggests that schizophrenia is associated with elevated rCBF in the hippocampus, which "normalizes" with antipsychotic drug treatment. Ketamine, the noncompetitive NMDA receptor antagonist, was more potent in reducing rCBF in the schizophrenic group compared to the normal volunteer group. These data are consistent with a previous report from our laboratory of reduced NMDA receptor NR1 subunit expression and possible abnormal NMDA receptor composition in schizophrenia. These data show an abnormality of hippocampal function in schizophrenia and suggest that this abnormality may be associated with the pathophysiology of the illness.


Sujet(s)
Hippocampe/imagerie diagnostique , Hippocampe/physiopathologie , Schizophrénie/imagerie diagnostique , Schizophrénie/physiopathologie , Stimulation acoustique , Adulte , Neuroleptiques/administration et posologie , Circulation cérébrovasculaire/effets des médicaments et des substances chimiques , Circulation cérébrovasculaire/physiologie , Antagonistes des acides aminés excitateurs , Femelle , Halopéridol/administration et posologie , Hippocampe/vascularisation , Humains , Kétamine , Imagerie par résonance magnétique , Mâle , Discrimination de la hauteur tonale , Schizophrénie/traitement médicamenteux , Tomoscintigraphie
4.
Am J Psychiatry ; 158(11): 1797-808, 2001 Nov.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11691685

RÉSUMÉ

OBJECTIVE: Using functional brain imaging, the authors sought to replicate their earlier finding of low metabolism in the middle frontal and inferior parietal cortices of schizophrenic patients with primary negative symptoms. METHOD: According to the presence or absence of enduring negative symptoms, patients with schizophrenia were classified as having deficit or nondeficit schizophrenia, respectively. Twelve normal volunteers and 18 drug-free schizophrenic volunteers (deficit, N=8; nondeficit, N=10) were trained in a tone discrimination task. They were trained to perform with 70%-80% accuracy and were then scanned with positron emission tomography with [(15)O]H(2)O during three conditions: rest, sensory-motor control task, and decision task. RESULTS: Levels of performance of the auditory recognition task were similar in the three groups. An initial hypothesis-driven analysis revealed that across tasks the deficit group failed to show significant activation in the middle frontal cortex. This was in contrast to both the normal volunteers and nondeficit patients. When the patient groups were contrasted, the deficit patients showed significantly less activation in the middle frontal cortex bilaterally during the control task and in the right middle frontal cortex and inferior parietal cortex during the decision task. An exploratory analysis contrasting deficit and nondeficit patients across conditions did not reveal further differences between groups. CONCLUSIONS: This study replicated the finding of low activation in the middle frontal cortex and inferior parietal cortex in deficit schizophrenia. This deficit was observed without performance confound and may provide a marker of primary negative symptoms and a target for new therapies.


Sujet(s)
Perception auditive/physiologie , Lobe frontal/vascularisation , Lobe frontal/physiopathologie , Lobe pariétal/vascularisation , Lobe pariétal/physiopathologie , , Schizophrénie/physiopathologie , Adulte , Neuroleptiques/usage thérapeutique , Circulation cérébrovasculaire/physiologie , Femelle , Lobe frontal/imagerie diagnostique , Humains , Mâle , Lobe pariétal/imagerie diagnostique , Performance psychomotrice/physiologie , Temps de réaction , Schizophrénie/imagerie diagnostique , Schizophrénie/traitement médicamenteux , Tomoscintigraphie
5.
Exp Brain Res ; 140(1): 66-76, 2001 Sep.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11500799

RÉSUMÉ

Positron emission tomography (PET) was used to examine changes in the cerebellum as subjects learned to make movements with their right arm while holding the handle of a robot that produced a force field. Brain images were acquired during learning and then during recall at 2 and 4 weeks. We also acquired images during a control task where the force field was not learnable and subjects did not show any improvements across sessions. During the 1st day, we observed that motor errors decreased from the control condition to the learning condition. However, regional cerebral blood flow (rCBF) in the posterior region of the right cerebellar cortex initially increased from the control condition and then gradually declined with reductions in motor error. Correspondingly, rCBF in the ipsilateral deep cerebellar nuclei (DCN) initially decreased from the control condition and then increased with reductions in motor error. If measures of rCBF mainly reflect presynaptic activity of neurons, this result predicts that DCN neurons fire with a pattern that starts high in the control task then decreases as learning proceeds. Similarly, Purkinje cells should generally have their lowest activity in the control task. This pattern is consistent with neurophysiological recordings that find that cerebellar activity during early learning of a motor task may mainly reflect changes in coactivation of muscles of the limbs, rather than a learning specific signal. By the end of the first session, motor errors had reached a minimum and no further improvements were observed. However, across the weeks a region in the anterior cerebellar cortex showed gradual decreases in rCBF that could not be attributed to changes in motor performance. Because patterns of rCBF in the cortex and nuclei were highly anti-correlated, we used structural equation modeling to estimate how synaptic activity in the cerebellar cortex influenced synaptic activity in the DCN. We found a negative correlation with a strength that significantly increased during the 4 weeks. This suggests that, during long-term recall, the same input to the cerebellar cortex would produce less synaptic activity at the DCN, possibly because of reduced cerebellar cortex output to the DCN.


Sujet(s)
Adaptation biologique/physiologie , Bras/physiologie , Cervelet/métabolisme , Circulation cérébrovasculaire/physiologie , Force de la main/physiologie , Aptitudes motrices/physiologie , Mouvement/physiologie , Adulte , Bras/innervation , Phénomènes biomécaniques , Cartographie cérébrale , Cortex cérébelleux/anatomie et histologie , Cortex cérébelleux/métabolisme , Noyaux du cervelet/anatomie et histologie , Noyaux du cervelet/métabolisme , Cervelet/anatomie et histologie , Femelle , Latéralité fonctionnelle/physiologie , Humains , Mâle , Modèles neurologiques , Voies nerveuses/métabolisme , Neurones/métabolisme , Dynamique non linéaire , Tomoscintigraphie
6.
Neuropsychopharmacology ; 25(2): 165-72, 2001 Aug.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11425500

RÉSUMÉ

The aim of this study was to examine the potential of serial rCBF studies to directly characterize the regional effects and dynamic time course of the centrally active drug ketamine. The value of a broader application of this technique to other neurally active drugs to characterize the pharmacodynamics of CNS compounds is suggested by these data. Thirteen normal subjects received a 0.3 mg/kg intravenous dose of ketamine over 60 seconds; ten other individuals received placebo in the same manner. For each subject, three baseline PET rCBF scans and seven sequential post-ketamine scans at 10-minute intervals were obtained using H(2)(15)O water. SPM techniques were employed to identify the maxima of any cluster significant by spatial extent analysis at any post-ketamine time point between 0 and 36 min. These extremes from the ketamine group, were identified in placebo scans similarly and grown to a 6x6x12 mm voxel set. The average rCBF values of the ketamine-defined clusters were determined in the drug and placebo conditions at all time points. rCBF across time was plotted for each cluster and compared between drug and placebo. Area under the curve (AUC) was calculated between baseline and 36 minutes. The kinetic characteristics of the ketamine-induced rCBF curves were compared to induced behaviors in each maxima. Ketamine produced distinct patterns of rCBF change over time in different brain regions; maxima within an anatomically defined region responded similarly. Ketamine induced rCBF activations in anterior cingulate, medial frontal and inferior frontal cortices. All maxima with a relative flow reduction with ketamine were in the cerebellum. The pattern of all activations and suppressions was monophasic with the peak changes at 6-16 minutes. In preliminary analysis, individual C(max) and AUC of maxima in the anterior cingulate/medial frontal region tended to correlate with the mild psychotomimetic action of ketamine; whereas, there was no tendency toward correlation with this psychological change in cerebellar maxima. The direct action of a centrally active drug can be assessed regionally and dynamically in brain using rCBF and a scan sequence optimally timed to complement the drug's time course. Ketamine pharmacodynamic response can be related to concurrent behavioral changes, tending to link the behavior with a brain region. This experimental design provides direct characterization of drug action in the CNS in ways heretofore unavailable.


Sujet(s)
Anesthésiques dissociatifs/pharmacologie , Encéphale/effets des médicaments et des substances chimiques , Circulation cérébrovasculaire/effets des médicaments et des substances chimiques , Kétamine/pharmacologie , Adulte , Aire sous la courbe , Encéphale/imagerie diagnostique , Système nerveux central/imagerie diagnostique , Système nerveux central/effets des médicaments et des substances chimiques , Femelle , Humains , Mâle , Radio-isotopes de l'oxygène , Tomoscintigraphie/méthodes
8.
Am J Psychiatry ; 157(10): 1634-45, 2000 Oct.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11007718

RÉSUMÉ

OBJECTIVE: The biological characteristics of schizophrenia are often studied by using functional imaging techniques. However, since volunteers with schizophrenia routinely fail to perform as accurately or as quickly as healthy volunteers, it is difficult to ascertain whether a particular deficit in blood flow to a brain region is due to behavior or to the underlying illness. In this report, investigators used an auditory recognition task to assess brain blood flow patterns and behavioral correlates of schizophrenic patient volunteers trained on the task. METHOD: Twelve healthy volunteers and 18 volunteers with schizophrenia were trained to make tone frequency recognitions. Accuracy and stimuli were matched between groups. Participants were required to press a button to indicate whether a briefly presented tone was the high-frequency (1500 Hz) reference tone or one of a lower frequency level (level chosen to elicit an 80% accuracy score). Subjects underwent bolus [(15)O]H(2)O blood flow positron emission tomography during inactive rest, a sensory motor control condition, and the decision task. Blood flow patterns were assessed between conditions and between groups. RESULTS: As a group, the patients with schizophrenia (who performed as quickly and accurately as the comparison subjects) exhibited significantly less change in regional cerebral blood flow (rCBF) to the anterior cingulate and supplementary motor cortices when switching from the sensory motor control to the decision condition. There were also marked between-group differences in correlations between rCBF and response time. Whereas the comparison subjects exhibited progressively greater blood flow to the frontal cortex in association with longer response times, the schizophrenic patients exhibited progressively lower blood flow in conjunction with extended response times. CONCLUSIONS: The failure to appropriately enhance cingulate activity when engaged in a demanding task and the progressive, time-dependent decline in frontal blood flow suggest that patients with schizophrenia are unable to make optimal use of frontocingulate systems when maximally engaged in high-error tasks.


Sujet(s)
Perception auditive/physiologie , Encéphale/vascularisation , Performance psychomotrice/physiologie , Schizophrénie/diagnostic , Adulte , Encéphale/physiologie , Prise de décision/physiologie , /physiologie , Femelle , Lobe frontal/vascularisation , Lobe frontal/physiologie , Gyrus du cingulum/vascularisation , Gyrus du cingulum/physiologie , Humains , Mâle , Cortex moteur/vascularisation , Cortex moteur/physiologie , Radio-isotopes de l'oxygène , Temps de réaction/physiologie , Débit sanguin régional/physiologie , Psychologie des schizophrènes , Tomoscintigraphie/statistiques et données numériques
11.
Exp Brain Res ; 126(2): 235-51, 1999 May.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-10369146

RÉSUMÉ

The ability to inhibit previously learned visuomotor associations is essential for efficient learning of novel behaviors. While the neural basis of the system that might control interactions between competing motor memories is not known, it has been demonstrated that animals with ventral and orbital prefrontal cortex (PFC) deficits have particular difficulties in learning to withhold responses to previously conditioned sensory stimuli. Here we measured regional cerebral blood flow (rCBF), using positron emission tomography, during learning of a novel motor task that required inhibition of a previously learned motor memory. Subjects (n=24) learned reaching movements in a force field (field A). After a variable time interval, some subjects (n=15) learned to reach in a field with a reversed pattern of forces (field B). When the time interval was short (10 min), learning in field B was coincident with a reactivation of regions that had become initially activated during learning in field A: the left putamen and bilaterally in the dorsolateral PFC. Behaviorally, this was accompanied with perseveration that lasted for hundreds of movements, suggesting an instantiation of the internal model for field A during learning in field B. Neither the reactivation nor the perseveration were observed in a different group of subjects that learned field B at 5.5 h. We found that the regions which significantly differentiated the two groups during learning of B were in the ventrolateral PFC (bilaterally): there were sharp decreases in rCBF here in the 5.5 group but not in the 10-min group. At 5.5 h motor learning again involved the striatum, but this time in the left caudate. Neither the caudate nor the ventral PFC had exhibited learning-related activity in field A. Instead, they showed changes in rCBF during the reversal of the learning problem when the previously acquired motor memory was successfully gated. The results demonstrate that: (1) perseveration of a competing motor memory may be linked to reactivation of the neural circuit that participated in acquiring that memory, and (2) the ventral PFC may play an important role in the inhibitory control of the competing motor memory.


Sujet(s)
Cartographie cérébrale/méthodes , Encéphale/physiologie , Apprentissage/physiologie , Mémoire/physiologie , Activité motrice/physiologie , Adulte , Encéphale/vascularisation , Encéphale/imagerie diagnostique , Circulation cérébrovasculaire , Femelle , Humains , Traitement d'image par ordinateur , Articulations/physiologie , Mâle , Mouvement/physiologie , Radio-isotopes de l'oxygène , Débit sanguin régional , Tomoscintigraphie
13.
Cereb Cortex ; 8(6): 534-42, 1998 Sep.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-9758216

RÉSUMÉ

Tone recognition is partially subserved by neural activity in the right frontal and primary auditory cortices. First we determined the brain areas associated with tone perception and recognition. This study then examined how regional cerebral blood flow (rCBF) in these and other brain regions correlates with the behavioral characteristics of a difficult tone recognition task. rCBF changes were assessed using H2(15)O positron emission tomography. Subtraction procedures were used to localize significant change regions and correlational analyses were applied to determine how response times (RT) predicted rCBF patterns. Twelve trained normal volunteers were studied in three conditions: REST, sensory motor control (SMC) and decision (DEC). The SMC-REST contrast revealed bilateral activation of primary auditory cortices, cerebellum and bilateral inferior frontal gyri. DEC-SMC produced significant clusters in the right middle and inferior frontal gyri, insula and claustrum; the anterior cingulate gyrus and supplementary motor area; the left insula/claustrum; and the left cerebellum. Correlational analyses, RT versus rCBF from DEC scans, showed a positive correlation in right inferior and middle frontal cortex; rCBF in bilateral auditory cortices and cerebellum exhibited significant negative correlations with RT These changes suggest that neural activity in the right frontal, superior temporal and cerebellar regions shifts back and forth in magnitude depending on whether tone recognition RT is relatively fast or slow, during a difficult, accurate assessment.


Sujet(s)
Stimulation acoustique/méthodes , Perception auditive/physiologie , Cortex cérébral/vascularisation , Cortex cérébral/physiologie , Mémoire/physiologie , Adulte , Anatomie en coupes transversales , Cortex cérébral/anatomie et histologie , Prise de décision/physiologie , Femelle , Humains , Mâle , Activité motrice/physiologie , Temps de réaction/physiologie , Débit sanguin régional/physiologie , Repos , Tomoscintigraphie
14.
Science ; 277(5327): 821-5, 1997 Aug 08.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-9242612

RÉSUMÉ

Computational studies suggest that acquisition of a motor skill involves learning an internal model of the dynamics of the task, which enables the brain to predict and compensate for mechanical behavior. During the hours that follow completion of practice, representation of the internal model gradually changes, becoming less fragile with respect to behavioral interference. Here, functional imaging of the brain demonstrates that within 6 hours after completion of practice, while performance remains unchanged, the brain engages new regions to perform the task; there is a shift from prefrontal regions of the cortex to the premotor, posterior parietal, and cerebellar cortex structures. This shift is specific to recall of an established motor skill and suggests that with the passage of time, there is a change in the neural representation of the internal model and that this change may underlie its increased functional stability.


Sujet(s)
Cortex cérébelleux/physiologie , Mémoire , Cortex moteur/physiologie , Aptitudes motrices , Lobe pariétal/physiologie , Cortex préfrontal/physiologie , Adulte , Cartographie cérébrale , Cortex cérébelleux/vascularisation , Cortex cérébelleux/imagerie diagnostique , Humains , Apprentissage , Mâle , Cortex moteur/vascularisation , Cortex moteur/imagerie diagnostique , Lobe pariétal/vascularisation , Lobe pariétal/imagerie diagnostique , Cortex préfrontal/vascularisation , Cortex préfrontal/imagerie diagnostique , Putamen/vascularisation , Putamen/imagerie diagnostique , Putamen/physiologie , Débit sanguin régional , Facteurs temps , Tomoscintigraphie
15.
Biol Psychiatry ; 39(12): 1013-22, 1996 Jun 15.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-8780836

RÉSUMÉ

Using positron emission tomography with the tracer 18-fluoro-D-deoxyglucose, we assessed regional cerebral glucose utilization patterns (rCMRglu) associated with three performance levels in a forced choice, tone recognition task. Four normal subjects responded with one hand when they heard a high-frequency tone (1500 Hz), and with the other hand when they recognized a low-frequency tone (750 Hz). The EASY (EAS) condition accuracy average was 96%, the INTERMEDIATE level accuracy averaged 89%, and the DIFFICULT (DIF) recognition task accuracy average was 77%. Statistical parametric mapping (SPM94) analysis revealed that the DIF minus EAS contrast is associated with a marked metabolic elevation in the right middle and inferior temporal gyri and the gyrus fusiformis. The EAS minus DIF contrast revealed greater rCMRglu in the right medial geniculate body. Enhanced activity in right temporal lobe structures may reflect a role in auditory memory and "image" visualization. The medial geniculate enhancement may reflect tone frequency assessment.


Sujet(s)
Éveil/physiologie , Attention/physiologie , Glycémie/métabolisme , Encéphale/imagerie diagnostique , Métabolisme énergétique/physiologie , Discrimination de la hauteur tonale/physiologie , Tomoscintigraphie , Adulte , Encéphale/physiologie , Cartographie cérébrale , Désoxyglucose/analogues et dérivés , Désoxyglucose/métabolisme , Dominance cérébrale/physiologie , Femelle , Fluorodésoxyglucose F18 , Corps géniculés/imagerie diagnostique , Corps géniculés/physiologie , Humains , Traitement d'image par ordinateur , Mâle , Rappel mnésique/physiologie , Lobe temporal/imagerie diagnostique , Lobe temporal/physiologie
17.
Am J Psychiatry ; 153(1): 41-9, 1996 Jan.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-8540590

RÉSUMÉ

OBJECTIVE: The functional pathways through which antipsychotic drugs act in the brain to decrease psychosis remain unknown, despite our knowledge that their site of initial action is through blockade of dopamine D2 receptors. The authors sought to define the brain regions that are functionally altered by neuroleptic drugs. METHODS: Regional cerebral glucose metabolism was studied in 12 subjects with schizophrenia while they were receiving a fixed dose of haloperidol, again 5 days after withdrawal of the drug, and a third time 30 days after withdrawal. Positron emission tomography with an [18F]fluorodeoxyglucose tracer was used in a within-subject design. RESULTS: The analysis demonstrated a decrease in glucose metabolism in the caudate and putamen 30 days after withdrawal, indicating that haloperidol treatment enhanced glucose utilization in these areas. The thalamus, bilaterally but only in anterior areas, showed the same response to haloperidol. Only in the frontal cortex and in the anterior cingulate had metabolism increased 30 days after withdrawal, indicating that in those two cortical areas haloperidol depressed glucose metabolism. In the 5-day drug free scans, no regions differed significantly from those in the haloperidol condition, despite numerical changes. CONCLUSIONS: It appears that 5 days of neuroleptic withdrawal are inadequate to escape the effects of neuroleptic drugs on regional cerebral glucose metabolism. The pattern and localization of changes in metabolic activity between the haloperidol condition and the 30-day drug-free condition suggest that haloperidol exerts its primary antidopaminergic action in the basal ganglia. It is proposed that the additional changes in the thalamus and cortex are secondary to this primary site of drug action, mediated through classically described striato-thalamo-cortical pathways.


Sujet(s)
Encéphale/effets des médicaments et des substances chimiques , Encéphale/métabolisme , Glucose/métabolisme , Halopéridol/pharmacologie , Adulte , Âge de début , Noyaux gris centraux/effets des médicaments et des substances chimiques , Noyaux gris centraux/métabolisme , Encéphale/imagerie diagnostique , Cortex cérébral/imagerie diagnostique , Cortex cérébral/effets des médicaments et des substances chimiques , Cortex cérébral/métabolisme , Désoxyglucose/analogues et dérivés , Femelle , Fluorodésoxyglucose F18 , Halopéridol/usage thérapeutique , Humains , Système limbique/imagerie diagnostique , Système limbique/effets des médicaments et des substances chimiques , Système limbique/métabolisme , Imagerie par résonance magnétique , Mâle , Adulte d'âge moyen , Échelles d'évaluation en psychiatrie , Récepteurs dopaminergiques/effets des médicaments et des substances chimiques , Récepteurs dopaminergiques/métabolisme , Schizophrénie/imagerie diagnostique , Schizophrénie/traitement médicamenteux , Schizophrénie/métabolisme , Psychologie des schizophrènes , Thalamus/imagerie diagnostique , Thalamus/effets des médicaments et des substances chimiques , Thalamus/métabolisme , Tomoscintigraphie
19.
Psychiatry Res ; 58(1): 53-67, 1995 Sep 08.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-8539312

RÉSUMÉ

The purpose of this study was to test the hypothesis that abnormal smooth pursuit eye movements in schizophrenic patients would be related to cerebral glucose utilization in specific oculomotor regions. Eye movements were assessed with infrared oculography in 11 unmedicated schizophrenic patients and 13 normal comparison subjects. For the patients only, regional cerebral metabolic rate of glucose utilization was measured with positron emission tomography. Abnormal pursuit tracking in the patients was associated with relatively decreased metabolism in the frontal eye fields and increased metabolism in the caudate nuclei. The results are consistent with the hypothesis that these cerebral regions are involved in the pathophysiology of abnormal pursuit as related parts of a cortical-subcortical oculomotor circuit.


Sujet(s)
Glycémie/métabolisme , Encéphale/imagerie diagnostique , Nerf oculomoteur/imagerie diagnostique , Poursuite oculaire/physiologie , Schizophrénie/imagerie diagnostique , Psychologie des schizophrènes , Tomoscintigraphie , Adulte , Encéphale/physiopathologie , Cartographie cérébrale , Noyau caudé/imagerie diagnostique , Noyau caudé/physiopathologie , Dominance cérébrale/physiologie , Dyskinésie due aux médicaments/imagerie diagnostique , Dyskinésie due aux médicaments/physiopathologie , Femelle , Lobe frontal/imagerie diagnostique , Lobe frontal/physiopathologie , Humains , Traitement d'image par ordinateur , Mâle , Adulte d'âge moyen , Nerf oculomoteur/physiopathologie , Échelles d'évaluation en psychiatrie , Valeurs de référence , Schizophrénie/physiopathologie , Noyaux du thalamus/imagerie diagnostique , Noyaux du thalamus/physiopathologie , Cortex visuel/imagerie diagnostique , Cortex visuel/physiopathologie
20.
Int Clin Psychopharmacol ; 10 Suppl 3: 29-37, 1995 Sep.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-8866763

RÉSUMÉ

Glutamate-containing neuronal terminals are ubiquitous in the central nervous system and their functional importance in mental activity is considerable. Therefore, the involvement of this neurotransmitter in the pathology of schizophrenia is being studied. Biochemical evidence has suggested that glutamatergic transmission may be regionally reduced in schizophrenia, although this evidence has never been completely consistent nor fully replicable. More striking has been the behavioral effects in humans of the antiglutamatergic drugs phencyclidine (PCP) and its congener ketamine. By historical report, PCP produces a 'schizophrenia-like' psychosis in normal humans and aggravates the psychosis in schizophrenics. More recently, ketamine has been shown to produce a mild psychotomimetic effect in normal volunteers, which has some schizophrenia-like features. We have studied the effects of ketamine in schizophrenic patients. Here, ketamine intensified each patient's specific underlying psychosis, an effect not blocked by haloperidol. Moreover, ketamine selectively increased cerebral blood flow (CBF) in the anterior cingulate cortex and reduced CBF in hippocampus and lingual gyrus. These data may be pertinent to the subject's psychosis exacerbation, especially because both cingulate and hippocampus have been previously implicated in schizophrenic psychosis. In addition, ketamine produced a distinctive dynamic time-course of regional CBF changes in different anatomic regions, with immediate (5-10 min) changes in cingulate, but somewhat more delayed changes (20-40 min) in the thalamus and cerebellum. Our immediate early gene (IEG) time-course data with c-fos and zif268 in rats following PCP suggest that a single dose of this antiglutamatergic compound can have an effect in some brain areas which lasts beyond 48 h, an effect which is distinct by IEG and by region. Together, these data suggest that glutamate-mediated neurotransmission has a strong influence in schizophrenia, although the specifics of this involvement have yet to be articulated.


Sujet(s)
Acide glutamique/pharmacologie , Schizophrénie/traitement médicamenteux , Autoradiographie , Vitesse du flux sanguin/effets des médicaments et des substances chimiques , Circulation cérébrovasculaire/effets des médicaments et des substances chimiques , Acide glutamique/usage thérapeutique , Hippocampe/effets des médicaments et des substances chimiques , Humains , Kétamine/pharmacologie , Agents neuromédiateurs/métabolisme , ARN messager/métabolisme
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