Title of article
Cortical effects of quetiapine in first-episode schizophrenia: A preliminary functional magnetic resonance imaging study
Author/Authors
Hugh M. Jones، نويسنده , , Michael J. Brammer، نويسنده , , Mary O’Toole، نويسنده , , Tess Taylor، نويسنده , , Ruth I. Ohlsen، نويسنده , , Richard G. Brown، نويسنده , , Richard Purvis، نويسنده , , Steven Williams، نويسنده , , Lyn S. Pilowsky، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2004
Pages
5
From page
938
To page
942
Abstract
Background
Quetiapine improves both psychotic symptoms and cognitive function in schizophrenia. The neural basis of these actions is poorly understood.
Methods
Three subject groups underwent a single functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) session: drug-naive (n = 7) and quetiapine-treated samples of patients with schizophrenia (n = 8) and a healthy control group (n = 8). The fMRI session included an overt verbal fluency task and a passive auditory stimulation task.
Results
In the verbal fluency task, there was significantly increased activation in the left inferior frontal cortex in the quetiapine-treated patients and the healthy control sample compared with the drug-naive sample. During auditory stimulation, the healthy control group and stably treated group produced significantly greater activation in the superior temporal gyrus than the drug-naive sample.
Conclusions
Quetiapine treatment is associated with altered blood oxygen level-dependent responses in both the prefrontal and temporal cortex that cannot be accounted for by improved task performance subsequent to drug treatment.
Keywords
gene expression , in situ hybridization , Chaperone , Haloperidol , Postmortem , Microarray
Journal title
Biological Psychiatry
Serial Year
2004
Journal title
Biological Psychiatry
Record number
502509
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