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1.
Schizophr Bull ; 43(5): 1134-1142, 2017 09 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28177089

ABSTRACT

Neuroimaging studies investigating dopamine (DA) function widely support the hypothesis of presynaptic striatal DA hyperactivity in schizophrenia. However, published data on the striatal DA transporter (DAT) appear less consistent with this hypothesis, probably partly due to methodological limitations. Moreover, DAT in extrastriatal regions has been very poorly investigated in the context of schizophrenia. In order to address these issues, we used a high resolution positron emission tomograph and the selective DAT radioligand [11C]PE2I, coupled with a whole brain voxel-based analysis method to investigate DAT availability in striatal but also extra-striatal regions in 21 male chronic schizophrenia patients compared to 30 healthy male controls matched by age. We found higher DAT availability in schizophrenia patients in midbrain, striatal, and limbic regions. DAT availability in amygdala/hippocampus and putamen/pallidum was positively correlated with hallucinations and suspiciousness/persecution, respectively. These results are consistent with an increase of presynaptic DA function in patients with schizophrenia, and support the involvement of both striatal and extrastriatal DA dysfunction in positive psychotic symptoms. The study also highlights the whole brain voxel-based analysis method to explore DA dysfunction in schizophrenia.


Subject(s)
Corpus Striatum/metabolism , Dopamine Plasma Membrane Transport Proteins/metabolism , Limbic System/metabolism , Mesencephalon/metabolism , Positron-Emission Tomography/methods , Schizophrenia/metabolism , Schizophrenia/physiopathology , Adult , Corpus Striatum/diagnostic imaging , Humans , Limbic System/diagnostic imaging , Male , Mesencephalon/diagnostic imaging , Schizophrenia/diagnostic imaging , Young Adult
3.
Nucl Med Commun ; 35(2): 113-22, 2014 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24352107

ABSTRACT

Combined PET/computed tomography (CT) is of value in cancer diagnosis, follow-up, and treatment planning. For cancers located in the thorax or abdomen, the patient's breathing causes artifacts and errors in PET and CT images. Many different approaches for artifact avoidance or correction have been developed; most are based on gated acquisition and synchronization between the respiratory signal and PET acquisition. The respiratory signal is usually produced by an external sensor that tracks a physiological characteristic related to the patient's breathing. Respiratory gating is a compensation technique in which time or amplitude binning is used to exclude the motion in reconstructed PET images. Although this technique is performed in routine clinical practice, it fails to adequately correct for respiratory motion because each gate can mix several tissue positions. Researchers have suggested either selecting PET events from gated acquisitions or performing several PET acquisitions (corresponding to a breath-hold CT position). However, the PET acquisition time must be increased if adequate counting statistics are to be obtained in the different gates after binning. Hence, other researchers have assessed correction techniques that take account of all the counting statistics (without increasing the acquisition duration) and integrate motion information before, during, or after the reconstruction process. Here, we provide an overview of how motion is managed to overcome respiratory motion in PET/CT images.


Subject(s)
Movement , Multimodal Imaging/methods , Positron-Emission Tomography/methods , Respiration , Tomography, X-Ray Computed/methods , Humans , Image Processing, Computer-Assisted
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