Positron emission tomographic study of affective disorders:
problems and strategies
Source: Ann Neurol
1984;15 Suppl:S149-S156.
Author: Phelps ME;Mazziotta JC;Baxter L;Gerner R PubMed ID: 6611115
Abstract:
Because anatomical studies of psychiatric disorders in humans have
been largely unsuccessful, and because pharmacological interventions in
patients with mental illness can be analyzed by means of biochemical
assay techniques, positron emission tomography (PET) provides an
exciting new means to study mental illness. Using fluorine-18-labeled
fluorodeoxyglucose and PET to measure local cerebral glucose
utilization, the investigators examined patients with affective
disorders and normal age-matched controls. Patients with unipolar
depression were studied in a drug-free baseline state following short-
term administration of methylphenidate and in a euthymic state in long-
term follow-up. Patients with bipolar disorders were studied in either
the manic or depressed phases of illness and again in a euthymic state
in long-term follow-up. Age-matched controls were studied both with and
without methylphenidate administration. The results demonstrate that
metabolic subgrouping of patients may be possible. Mood changes produced
by pharmacological agents resulted in changes in the patterns of
metabolism when compared with the baseline state. Problems associated
with the use of PET to study mental illness fall into the categories of
patient classification (diagnosis, state, trait, ambient conditions, and
mental processes) and data analysis (anatomical and statistical). These
problems, the limitations of the present techniques, and strategies for
their improvement are discussed. Despite these difficulties, PET should
prove to be a fruitful means of exploring the human biochemical
abnormalities associated with mental illness