20 results on '"Buchsbaum, M S"'
Search Results
2. Limbic circuitry in patients with autism spectrum disorders studied with positron emission tomography and magnetic resonance imaging.
- Author
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Haznedar MM, Buchsbaum MS, Wei TC, Hof PR, Cartwright C, Bienstock CA, and Hollander E
- Subjects
- Adult, Amygdala anatomy & histology, Amygdala diagnostic imaging, Asperger Syndrome diagnosis, Asperger Syndrome diagnostic imaging, Asperger Syndrome metabolism, Autistic Disorder diagnostic imaging, Female, Fluorodeoxyglucose F18, Glucose metabolism, Gyrus Cinguli anatomy & histology, Gyrus Cinguli metabolism, Hippocampus anatomy & histology, Hippocampus diagnostic imaging, Humans, Limbic System anatomy & histology, Limbic System diagnostic imaging, Male, Task Performance and Analysis, Verbal Learning physiology, Autistic Disorder diagnosis, Autistic Disorder metabolism, Limbic System metabolism, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Tomography, Emission-Computed
- Abstract
Objective: Cytoarchitectonic changes in the anterior cingulate cortex, hippocampus, subiculum, entorhinal cortex, amygdala, mammillary bodies, and septum were reported in a postmortem study of autism. Previously, the authors found smaller cingulate volume and decreased metabolism of the cingulate in seven autistic patients. In this study, they measured the volume and glucose metabolism of the amygdala, hippocampus, and cingulate gyrus in an expanded group of 17 patients with autism spectrum disorders (autism [N=10] or Asperger's disorder [N=7]) and 17 age- and sex-matched healthy volunteers., Method: Subjects performed a serial verbal learning test during (18)F-deoxyglucose uptake. The amygdala, hippocampus, and cingulate gyrus were outlined on magnetic resonance imaging scans, volumes of the structures were applied to matching coregistered positron emission tomography scans, and three-dimensional significance probability mapping was performed., Results: Significant metabolic reductions in both the anterior and posterior cingulate gyri were visualized in the patients with autism spectrum disorders. Both Asperger's and autism patients had relative glucose hypometabolism in the anterior and posterior cingulate as confirmed by analysis of variance; regional differences were also found with three-dimensional significance probability mapping. No group differences were found in either the metabolism or the volume of the amygdala or the hippocampus. However, patients with autism spectrum disorders showed reduced volume of the right anterior cingulate gyrus, specifically in Brodmann's area 24'., Conclusions: Compared with age- and sex-matched healthy volunteers, patients with autism spectrum disorders showed significantly decreased metabolism in both the anterior and posterior cingulate gyri.
- Published
- 2000
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Feeling unreal: a PET study of depersonalization disorder.
- Author
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Simeon D, Guralnik O, Hazlett EA, Spiegel-Cohen J, Hollander E, and Buchsbaum MS
- Subjects
- Adult, Brain metabolism, Cerebral Cortex diagnostic imaging, Cerebral Cortex metabolism, Depersonalization diagnosis, Depersonalization metabolism, Female, Fluorodeoxyglucose F18, Gyrus Cinguli diagnostic imaging, Gyrus Cinguli metabolism, Humans, Male, Neural Pathways diagnostic imaging, Neural Pathways metabolism, Occipital Lobe diagnostic imaging, Occipital Lobe metabolism, Parietal Lobe diagnostic imaging, Parietal Lobe metabolism, Prefrontal Cortex diagnostic imaging, Prefrontal Cortex metabolism, Brain diagnostic imaging, Depersonalization diagnostic imaging, Glucose metabolism, Tomography, Emission-Computed statistics & numerical data
- Abstract
Objective: The goal of this study was to assess brain glucose metabolism and its relationship to dissociation measures and clinical symptoms in DSM-IV depersonalization disorder., Method: Positron emission tomography scans coregistered with magnetic resonance images of eight subjects with depersonalization disorder were compared to those of 24 healthy comparison subjects. The two groups did not differ in age, sex, education, performance on a baseline neuropsychological battery, or performance on a verbal learning task administered during [(18)F]fluorodeoxyglucose uptake. A cortical analysis by individual Brodmann's areas was performed., Results: Compared to the healthy subjects, subjects with depersonalization disorder showed significantly lower metabolic activity in right Brodmann's areas 22 and 21 of the superior and middle temporal gyri and had significantly higher metabolism in parietal Brodmann's areas 7B and 39 and left occipital Brodmann's area 19. Dissociation and depersonalization scores among the subjects with depersonalization disorder were significantly positively correlated with metabolic activity in area 7B., Conclusions: Depersonalization appears to be associated with functional abnormalities along sequential hierarchical areas, secondary and cross-modal, of the sensory cortex (visual, auditory, and somatosensory), as well as areas responsible for an integrated body schema. These findings are in good agreement with the phenomenological conceptualization of depersonalization as a dissociation of perceptions as well as with the subjective symptoms of depersonalization disorder.
- Published
- 2000
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Prediction of antidepressant effects of sleep deprivation by metabolic rates in the ventral anterior cingulate and medial prefrontal cortex.
- Author
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Wu J, Buchsbaum MS, Gillin JC, Tang C, Cadwell S, Wiegand M, Najafi A, Klein E, Hazen K, Bunney WE Jr, Fallon JH, and Keator D
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Antidepressive Agents therapeutic use, Depressive Disorder diagnostic imaging, Female, Fluorodeoxyglucose F18, Frontal Lobe diagnostic imaging, Frontal Lobe metabolism, Gyrus Cinguli diagnostic imaging, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Prefrontal Cortex diagnostic imaging, Psychiatric Status Rating Scales, Tomography, Emission-Computed, Treatment Outcome, Depressive Disorder metabolism, Depressive Disorder therapy, Gyrus Cinguli metabolism, Prefrontal Cortex metabolism, Sleep Deprivation
- Abstract
Objective: Sleep deprivation has been shown to have an antidepressant benefit in a subgroup of depressed patients. Functional imaging studies by the authors and others have suggested that patients with elevated metabolic rates in the anterior cingulate gyrus at baseline are more likely to respond to either sleep deprivation or antidepressant medications than patients with normal metabolic rates. The authors extend their earlier work in a larger group of patients and explore additional brain areas with statistical probability mapping., Method: Thirty-six patients with unipolar depression and 26 normal volunteers were studied with positron emission tomography before and after sleep deprivation. Response to sleep deprivation was defined as a 40% or larger decrease in total scores on the Hamilton Depression Rating Scale., Results: One-third of the depressed patients had a significant response to sleep deprivation. Responders had higher relative metabolic rates in the medial prefrontal cortex, ventral anterior cingulate, and posterior subcallosal gyrus at baseline than depressed patients who did not respond to sleep deprivation and normal volunteers. Lower Hamilton depression scores correlated significantly with lower metabolic rates in the left medial prefrontal cortex. After sleep deprivation, significant decreases in metabolic rates occurred in the medial prefrontal cortex and frontal pole in the patients who responded positively to sleep deprivation., Conclusions: High pretreatment metabolic rates and decreases in metabolic rates after treatment in the medial prefrontal cortex may characterize a subgroup of depressed patients who improve following sleep deprivation and, perhaps, other antidepressant treatments.
- Published
- 1999
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Three-dimensional analysis with MRI and PET of the size, shape, and function of the thalamus in the schizophrenia spectrum.
- Author
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Hazlett EA, Buchsbaum MS, Byne W, Wei TC, Spiegel-Cohen J, Geneve C, Kinderlehrer R, Haznedar MM, Shihabuddin L, and Siever LJ
- Subjects
- Adult, Brain anatomy & histology, Brain diagnostic imaging, Brain metabolism, Diagnosis, Differential, Female, Humans, Image Processing, Computer-Assisted, Male, Memory physiology, Schizophrenia metabolism, Schizotypal Personality Disorder diagnostic imaging, Schizotypal Personality Disorder metabolism, Thalamic Nuclei anatomy & histology, Thalamic Nuclei diagnostic imaging, Thalamic Nuclei metabolism, Thalamus diagnostic imaging, Thalamus metabolism, Verbal Learning physiology, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Schizophrenia diagnosis, Schizotypal Personality Disorder diagnosis, Thalamus anatomy & histology, Tomography, Emission-Computed
- Abstract
Objective: In an exploration of the schizophrenia spectrum, the authors compared thalamic size, shape, and metabolic activity in unmedicated patients with schizophrenia and schizotypal personality disorder to findings in age- and sex-matched healthy control subjects., Method: Coregistered magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and positron emission tomography scans were obtained in 27 schizophrenic patients, 13 patients with schizotypal personality disorder, and 32 control subjects who performed a serial verbal learning test during tracer uptake. After thalamus edges were outlined on 1.2-mm MRI scans, a radial warping program yielded significance probability mapping in three dimensions., Results: Significance probability mapping (with resampling) identified an area in the region of the mediodorsal nucleus bilaterally with significantly lower relative metabolism in the schizophrenia group than in either the control or schizotypal personality disorder groups, which did not differ from each other. The three groups did not differ significantly in total thalamic volume in square millimeters or thalamic volume relative to brain volume. Shape analyses revealed that schizophrenic patients had significantly fewer pixels in the left anterior region, whereas patients with schizotypal personality disorder had significantly fewer pixels in the region of the right mediodorsal nucleus than did control subjects., Conclusions: Schizophrenic patients showed significant metabolism and shape differences from control subjects in selective subregions of the thalamus, whereas patients with schizotypal personality disorder showed only a difference in shape. Because the mediodorsal and anterior nuclei have different connections with limbic and prefrontal structures, the anterior thalamic shrinkage and mediodorsal metabolic and shape changes might relate to the different clinical pictures in schizotypal personality disorder and schizophrenia.
- Published
- 1999
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Anterior cingulate gyrus volume and glucose metabolism in autistic disorder.
- Author
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Haznedar MM, Buchsbaum MS, Metzger M, Solimando A, Spiegel-Cohen J, and Hollander E
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Autistic Disorder diagnostic imaging, Female, Gyrus Cinguli diagnostic imaging, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Tomography, Emission-Computed, Autistic Disorder diagnosis, Autistic Disorder metabolism, Glucose metabolism, Gyrus Cinguli anatomy & histology, Gyrus Cinguli metabolism
- Abstract
Objective: This study reports the first paired measurements of glucose metabolism and volume of the anterior cingulate gyrus in autism., Method: Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and positron emission tomography (PET) scans of seven high-functioning autistic patients and seven sex- and age-matched normal volunteers were coregistered. After the anterior cingulate gyri were outlined on the MRI images, the volumes of the structures were measured and corrected for brain volume. The volumes were then applied to the PET images and metabolic maps were obtained., Results: Right anterior cingulate area 24' was significantly smaller in relative volume, and both area 24 and area 24' were metabolically less active, in the autistic patients than in the normal subjects., Conclusions: Autism may be characterized by structural and functional alterations in the anterior cingulate gyrus.
- Published
- 1997
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. Decreased anterior cingulate gyrus metabolic rate in schizophrenia.
- Author
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Haznedar MM, Buchsbaum MS, Luu C, Hazlett EA, Siegel BV Jr, Lohr J, Wu J, Haier RJ, and Bunney WE Jr
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Deoxyglucose analogs & derivatives, Fluorodeoxyglucose F18, Gyrus Cinguli diagnostic imaging, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Schizophrenia diagnostic imaging, Tomography, Emission-Computed, Glucose metabolism, Gyrus Cinguli metabolism, Schizophrenia metabolism
- Abstract
Objective: This study examined glucose metabolism in the anterior and posterior cingulate cortex in schizophrenia., Method: Fifty unmedicated male schizophrenic patients and 24 normal men were studied with positron emission tomography., Results: Compared with the normal men, the schizophrenic patients had lower relative metabolic rates in the anterior cingulate and higher rates in the posterior cingulate., Conclusions: The findings suggest hypofunction in the anterior cingulate cortex in schizophrenia.
- Published
- 1997
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. Neuroimaging, VII: PET and the averaging of brain images.
- Author
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Buchsbaum MS
- Subjects
- Humans, Brain anatomy & histology, Brain diagnostic imaging, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Tomography, Emission-Computed
- Published
- 1996
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. PET and MRI of the thalamus in never-medicated patients with schizophrenia.
- Author
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Buchsbaum MS, Someya T, Teng CY, Abel L, Chin S, Najafi A, Haier RJ, Wu J, and Bunney WE Jr
- Subjects
- Adult, Chi-Square Distribution, Deoxyglucose analogs & derivatives, Female, Fluorodeoxyglucose F18, Functional Laterality, Humans, Male, Schizophrenia diagnosis, Schizophrenia diagnostic imaging, Thalamus diagnostic imaging, Thalamus pathology, Glucose metabolism, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Schizophrenia metabolism, Thalamus metabolism, Tomography, Emission-Computed
- Abstract
Objective: This study reports the first paired measurements of glucose metabolism and size of thalamic regions in never-medicated schizophrenic patients using coregistered magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) templates., Method: Positron emission tomography with [18F]fluorodeoxyglucose and matching MRI scans were obtained in 20 never-medicated patients with schizophrenia and 15 normal volunteers. Methods for thalamic edge finding, statistical testing of shape differences with chi-square maps, and MRI localization of major thalamic subregions were developed., Results: Patients with schizophrenia showed a diminished metabolic rate in the right thalamus, with a loss of the normal pattern of right greater than left asymmetry. Division into anterior/posterior segments revealed that the left anterior and right posterior showed the decrease. Differences were greater for metabolism in the weighted thalamic area (ratexarea) than for rate per unit area, a finding consistent with reported greater decreases in total neuron number than of neuron density in the thalami of schizophrenic patients. The area of the thalamus was smaller in the patients than in the volunteers, and this difference was greatest in the left anterior region., Conclusions: The reduced thalamic activity observed in this study lends further support to the concept of deficits in sensory filtering in schizophrenia.
- Published
- 1996
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. Cortical-striatal-thalamic circuits and brain glucose metabolic activity in 70 unmedicated male schizophrenic patients.
- Author
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Siegel BV Jr, Buchsbaum MS, Bunney WE Jr, Gottschalk LA, Haier RJ, Lohr JB, Lottenberg S, Najafi A, Nuechterlein KH, and Potkin SG
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Basal Ganglia metabolism, Basal Ganglia physiopathology, Brain physiopathology, Corpus Striatum metabolism, Corpus Striatum physiopathology, Deoxyglucose analogs & derivatives, Fluorodeoxyglucose F18, Frontal Lobe metabolism, Frontal Lobe physiopathology, Functional Laterality, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Psychiatric Status Rating Scales, Schizophrenia metabolism, Schizophrenia physiopathology, Thalamus metabolism, Thalamus physiopathology, Tomography, Emission-Computed, Brain metabolism, Glucose metabolism, Schizophrenia diagnosis, Schizophrenic Psychology
- Abstract
Objective: The cortical-striatal-thalamic circuit modulates cognitive processing and thus may be involved in the cognitive dysfunction in schizophrenia. The imaging of metabolic rate in the structures making up this circuit could reveal the correlates of schizophrenia and its main symptoms., Method: Seventy male schizophrenic patients underwent [18F]-fluorodeoxyglucose positron emission tomography after a period of at least 4 weeks during which they had not received neuroleptic medication and were compared to 30 age-matched male normal comparison subjects., Results: Analyses revealed decreased metabolism in medial frontal cortex, cingulate gyrus, medial temporal lobe, corpus callosum, and ventral caudate and increased metabolism in the left lateral temporal and occipital cortices in the schizophrenic cohort. Consistent with previous studies, the schizophrenic group had lower hypofrontality scores (ratios of lateral frontal to occipital metabolism) than did comparison subjects. The lateral frontal cortical metabolism of schizophrenic patients did not differ from that of comparison subjects, while occipital cortical metabolism was high, suggesting that lateral hypofrontality is due to abnormalities in occipital rather than lateral frontal activity. Hypofrontality was more prominent in medial than lateral frontal cortex. Brief Psychiatric Rating Scale (BPRS) scores, obtained for each schizophrenic patient on the scan day, were correlated with regional brain glucose metabolic rate. Medial frontal cortical and thalamic activity correlated negatively with total BPRS score and with positive and negative symptom scores. Lateral frontal cortical metabolism and hypofrontality scores did not significantly correlate with negative symptoms. Analyses of variance demonstrated a reduced right greater than left asymmetry in the schizophrenic patients for the lateral cortex as a whole, with simple interactions showing this effect specifically in temporal and frontal cortical regions., Conclusions: Low metabolic rates were confirmed in medial frontal cortical regions as well as in the basal ganglia, consistent with the importance of the cortical-striatal-thalamic pathways in schizophrenia. Loss of normal lateralization patterns was also observed on an exploratory basis. Correlations with negative symptoms and group differences were more prominent in medial than lateral frontal cortex, suggesting that medial regions may be more important in schizophrenic pathology.
- Published
- 1993
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. Effect of sleep deprivation on brain metabolism of depressed patients.
- Author
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Wu JC, Gillin JC, Buchsbaum MS, Hershey T, Johnson JC, and Bunney WE Jr
- Subjects
- Adult, Affect physiology, Brain diagnostic imaging, Brain physiology, Deoxyglucose analogs & derivatives, Depressive Disorder diagnosis, Depressive Disorder metabolism, Female, Fluorodeoxyglucose F18, Glucose metabolism, Humans, Limbic System diagnostic imaging, Limbic System metabolism, Male, Psychiatric Status Rating Scales, Tomography, Emission-Computed, Brain metabolism, Depressive Disorder therapy, Sleep Deprivation
- Abstract
Objective: Sleep deprivation is a rapid, nonpharmacologic antidepressant intervention that is effective for a subset of depressed patients. The objective of this study was to identify which brain structures' activity differentiates responders from nonresponders and to study how metabolism in these brain regions changes with mood., Method: Regional cerebral glucose metabolism was assessed by positron emission tomography (PET) with [18F]deoxyglucose (FDG) before and after total sleep deprivation in 15 unmedicated awake patients with unipolar major depression and 15 normal control subjects, who did the continuous performance test during FDG uptake., Results: After sleep deprivation, four patients showed a 40% or more improvement on the Hamilton Rating Scale for Depression. Before sleep deprivation the depressed responders had a significantly higher cingulate cortex metabolic rate than the depressed nonresponders, and this normalized after sleep deprivation. The normal control subjects and nonresponding depressed patients showed no change in cingulate metabolic rate after sleep deprivation., Conclusions: Overactivation of the limbic system as assessed by PET scans may characterize a subset of depressed patients. Normalization of activity with sleep deprivation is associated with a decrease in depression.
- Published
- 1992
- Full Text
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12. Greater left cerebral hemispheric metabolism in bulimia assessed by positron emission tomography.
- Author
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Wu JC, Hagman J, Buchsbaum MS, Blinder B, Derrfler M, Tai WY, Hazlett E, and Sicotte N
- Subjects
- Adult, Deoxyglucose analogs & derivatives, Deoxyglucose metabolism, Female, Fluorine Radioisotopes, Fluorodeoxyglucose F18, Humans, Tomography, Emission-Computed, Bulimia metabolism, Cerebral Cortex metabolism, Functional Laterality physiology
- Abstract
Eight women with bulimia and eight age- and sex-matched normal control subjects were studied with positron emission tomography using [18F]-fluorodeoxyglucose (FDG) as a tracer of brain metabolic rate. Subjects performed a visual vigilance task during FDG uptake. In control subjects, the metabolic rate was higher in the right hemisphere than in the left, but patients with bulimia did not have this normal asymmetry. Lower metabolic rates in the basal ganglia, found in studies of depressed subjects, and higher rates in the basal ganglia, reported in a study of anorexia nervosa, were not found. This is consistent with the suggestion that bulimia is a diagnostic grouping distinct from these disorders.
- Published
- 1990
- Full Text
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13. Paranoia and platelet MAO in normals and nonschizophrenic psychiatric groups.
- Author
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Haier RJ, Murphy DL, and Buchsbaum MS
- Subjects
- Affective Symptoms blood, Female, Humans, MMPI, Male, Paranoid Disorders blood, Affective Symptoms enzymology, Blood Platelets enzymology, Monoamine Oxidase blood, Paranoid Disorders enzymology
- Abstract
The authors compared the correlation between platelet monoamine oxidase (MAO) activity and the Paranoia (Pa) scale of the Minnesota Multiphasic Personality Inventory in several groups. The data suggest that there is a positive association between high MAO activity and high scores on the Pa scale but only in samples with psychopathology.
- Published
- 1979
- Full Text
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14. Impaired smooth pursuit eye movement: vulnerability marker for schizotypal personality disorder in a normal volunteer population.
- Author
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Siever LJ, Coursey RD, Alterman IS, Buchsbaum MS, and Murphy DL
- Subjects
- Adult, Diagnosis, Differential, Electrooculography, Humans, Male, Mental Disorders diagnosis, Mental Disorders physiopathology, Psychiatric Status Rating Scales, Schizophrenia genetics, Schizophrenia physiopathology, Schizophrenic Psychology, Schizotypal Personality Disorder physiopathology, Eye Movements, Schizotypal Personality Disorder diagnosis
- Abstract
Impaired smooth pursuit eye movement has been proposed as a possible biologic marker for schizophrenia. Preliminary studies have suggested that this impairment may be associated with social introversion and related psychopathology in a nonpsychiatric population. To evaluate the relationship between dysfunctional smooth pursuit eye movement and schizophrenia-related psychopathology, the authors screened a new, volunteer sample of 284 male college students for eye tracking accuracy. Volunteers identified as low-accuracy trackers were significantly more likely to be diagnosed (blindly) as having a schizotypal personality disorder by DSM-III criteria than those identified as high-accuracy trackers. The authors suggest that disordered smooth pursuit eye movement may reflect a vulnerability marker for schizotypal personality disorder.
- Published
- 1984
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
15. Biological heterogeneity in schizophrenic patients.
- Author
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Buchsbaum MS and Davis GC
- Subjects
- Biometry methods, Humans, N,N-Dimethyltryptamine urine, Schizophrenia urine, Tryptamines urine
- Published
- 1979
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
16. Positron emission tomography of the cerebellum in autism.
- Author
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Heh CW, Smith R, Wu J, Hazlett E, Russell A, Asarnow R, Tanguay P, and Buchsbaum MS
- Subjects
- Adult, Autistic Disorder diagnostic imaging, Autistic Disorder metabolism, Cerebellum diagnostic imaging, Deoxyglucose metabolism, Female, Fluorine Radioisotopes, Humans, Male, Autistic Disorder diagnosis, Cerebellum metabolism, Glucose metabolism, Tomography, Emission-Computed
- Abstract
On the basis of neurological evidence that autistic patients have fewer Purkinje and granule cells in the cerebellum as well as vermal cerebellar hypoplasia, the authors tested the hypothesis that autistic patients have cerebellar hypofunctioning. They used positron emission tomography of the cerebellum with 18F-labeled 2-deoxyglucose to study seven autistic patients and eight age-matched control subjects. The results showed no significant difference in mean cerebellar glucose metabolism between the two groups, but all mean glucose rates of the autistic patients were either equal to or greater than those of the control subjects. The implications of these findings are discussed.
- Published
- 1989
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
17. Analgesia to painful stimuli in affective illness.
- Author
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Davis GC, Buchsbaum MS, and Bunney WE Jr
- Subjects
- Adult, Analgesia, Endorphins physiology, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Sex Factors, Bipolar Disorder physiopathology, Depression physiopathology, Nociceptors physiopathology, Pain physiopathology
- Abstract
Patients with bipolar and unipolar affective illness (N = 76) were compared with 48 control subjects on a psychophysical pain rating procedure using both threshold and signal detection analysis. Affectively ill patients were more analgesic than controls, and depressed men were significantly more analgesic than depressed women or control subjects. Bipolar men showed a different pattern of analgesia than unipolar patients. Pain appreciation in depressed patients may be related to endogenous opiate-like substances; this could be assessed in narcotic antagonist studies of pain-tolerant depressed subjects.
- Published
- 1979
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
18. Clinical correlates of decreased anteroposterior metabolic gradients in positron emission tomography (PET) of schizophrenic patients.
- Author
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DeLisi LE, Buchsbaum MS, Holcomb HH, Dowling-Zimmerman S, Pickar D, Boronow J, Morihisa JM, van Kammen DP, Carpenter W, and Kessler R
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Atrophy, Brain metabolism, Cerebral Ventricles anatomy & histology, Deoxyglucose metabolism, Female, Fluorine, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Psychiatric Status Rating Scales, Radioisotopes, Schizophrenia diagnosis, Schizophrenic Psychology, Tomography, X-Ray Computed, Brain diagnostic imaging, Schizophrenia metabolism, Tomography, Emission-Computed
- Abstract
The finding in schizophrenic patients of a reversal of the normal frontal to posterior pattern of brain metabolic activity with positron emission tomography (PET) is of interest, but its relevance to psychopathology is unknown. Using PET, the authors studied 21 patients with chronic schizophrenia and 21 age- and sex-matched control subjects. Although eight of the 21 patients and only one of the control subjects showed a relatively lower anteroposterior metabolic gradient, no clinical correlates of this finding were noted. In addition, cerebral atrophy, as determined by CAT scan, was not associated with this aberrant metabolic pattern.
- Published
- 1985
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. Acute effects of caffeine in normal prepubertal boys.
- Author
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Elkins RN, Rapoport JL, Zahn TP, Buchsbaum MS, Weingartner H, Kopin IJ, Langer D, and Johnson C
- Subjects
- Attention drug effects, Child, Cognition drug effects, Dose-Response Relationship, Drug, Double-Blind Method, Humans, Male, Motor Activity drug effects, Caffeine pharmacology, Child Behavior drug effects
- Abstract
A recent study demonstrated that dextroamphetamine has an effect in normal prepubertal boys similar to that seen in hyperactive children. The purpose of the present study was to see whether the effects of caffeine are similar to those of amphetamine in normal children. The authors observed 19 prepubertal boys following administration of a single dose of placebo, 3 mg/kg of caffeine, and 10 mg/kg of caffeine in a double-blind, crossover design. Caffeine produced increased vigilance and decreased reaction time, as does amphetamine. Unlike amphetamine, however, the higher dose of caffeine did not have a motor calming effect but increased motor activity. Separate biological systems, therefore, may be differentially affected by the two substances.
- Published
- 1981
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. Childhood obsessive-compulsive disorder.
- Author
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Rapoport J, Elkins R, Langer DH, Sceery W, Buchsbaum MS, Gillin JC, Murphy DL, Zahn TP, Lake R, Ludlow C, and Mendelson W
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Blood Platelets enzymology, Depressive Disorder genetics, Electroencephalography, Evoked Potentials, Female, Humans, Male, Monoamine Oxidase blood, Norepinephrine blood, Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder enzymology, Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder genetics, Psychological Tests, Serotonin blood, Sleep Stages physiology, Social Adjustment, Child Development, Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder psychology
- Abstract
The authors collected clinical diagnostic, neurophysiological, electrophysiological, and biochemical data on 9 adolescents who had primary obsessive-compulsive disorder. The results indicate considerable descriptive validity of the syndrome in childhood and its independence from obsessional traits; however, all of the children had a history of major depressive disorder, and their sleep EEG measures resembled those of young adults with primary depressive disorder. The patients' families did not have a more consistent pattern of anxiety disorder or any other psychiatric disorder than do families of adult obsessive patients. Psycholinguistic test results showed a lack of normal laterality, which has been reported for other psychiatric illness.
- Published
- 1981
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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