Reduced cerebral glucose metabolism in asymptomatic subjects at
risk for Huntington's disease
Source: N Engl J Med
1987 Feb;316(7):357-362.
Author: Mazziotta JC;Phelps ME;Pahl JJ;Huang SC;Baxter LR;Riege WH;Hoffman
JM;Kuhl DE;Lanto AB;Wapenski JA PubMed ID: 2949152
Abstract:
Symptomatic patients with Huntington's disease may have reduced
glucose metabolism in the caudate nuclei. We used positron emission
tomography and [18F]fluorodeoxyglucose to study cerebral glucose
metabolism in 95 subjects: 58 clinically asymptomatic (chorea-free)
subjects at risk for Huntington's disease, 10 symptomatic patients with
the disease, and 27 controls. All the symptomatic patients had marked
reductions in caudate glucose metabolism. Despite a normal structural
appearance on computed tomography, caudate glucose metabolism was
bilaterally reduced in 31 percent of the subjects at risk (18 of 58).
Using each at-risk subject's age and the sex of the affected parent, we
averaged individual risk estimates for the development of Huntington's
disease for this group and predicted that the probability of having the
clinically unexpressed Huntington's disease gene should be 33.9 +/- 6.0
percent for the group. Thus, there was excellent agreement between the
predicted percentage of carriers of the Huntington's disease gene (33.9
+/- 6.0 percent) and the percentage with metabolic abnormalities of the
caudate nuclei (31 percent). These results indicate that the measurement
of glucose metabolism may allow the observation of the pathophysiologic
effects of the Huntington's disease gene during the natural development
of the disease. It may also provide a direct means to monitor the
response to experimental treatments during both the clinically
asymptomatic and the symptomatic phases of the disorder