Title of article :
Effects of mood and subtype on cerebral glucose metabolism in treatment-resistant bipolar disorder
Author/Authors :
Terence A. Ketter، نويسنده , , Tim A. Kimbrell، نويسنده , , Mark S. George، نويسنده , , Robert T. Dunn، نويسنده , , Andrew M. Speer، نويسنده , , Brenda E. Benson، نويسنده , , Mark W. Willis، نويسنده , , Aimee Danielson، نويسنده , , Mark A. Frye، نويسنده , , Peter Herscovitch، نويسنده , , Robert M. Post، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2001
Pages :
13
From page :
97
To page :
109
Abstract :
Background: Functional brain imaging studies in unipolar and secondary depression have generally found decreased prefrontal cortical activity, but in bipolar disorders findings have been more variable. Methods: Forty-three medication-free, treatment-resistant, predominantly rapid-cycling bipolar disorder patients and 43 age- and gender-matched healthy control subjects had cerebral glucose metabolism assessed using positron emission tomography and fluorine-18-deoxyglucose. Results: Depressed bipolar disorder patients compared to control subjects had decreased global, absolute prefrontal and anterior paralimbic cortical, and increased normalized subcortical (ventral striatum, thalamus, right amygdala) metabolism. Degree of depression correlated negatively with absolute prefrontal and paralimbic cortical, and positively with normalized anterior paralimbic subcortical metabolism. Increased normalized cerebello-posterior cortical metabolism was seen in all patient subgroups compared to control subjects, independent of mood state, disorder subtype, or cycle frequency. Conclusions: In bipolar depression, we observed a pattern of prefrontal hypometabolism, consistent with observations in primary unipolar and secondary depression, suggesting this is part of a common neural substrate for depression independent of etiology. In contrast, the cerebello-posterior cortical normalized hypermetabolism seen in all bipolar subgroups (including euthymic) suggests a possible congenital or acquired trait abnormality. The degree to which these findings in treatment-resistant, predominantly rapid-cycling patients pertain to community samples remains to be established.
Keywords :
Rapid cycling , depression , PET , Cerebral metabolism , Bipolar disorders
Journal title :
Biological Psychiatry
Serial Year :
2001
Journal title :
Biological Psychiatry
Record number :
501396
Link To Document :
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