Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
2565491 | Progress in Neuro-Psychopharmacology and Biological Psychiatry | 2010 | 8 Pages |
Abstract
Six imaging techniques were first used to study the neural basis of DI and mechanisms of antipsychotic therapy. The study provides first low-level evidence in vivo evidence of fronto-striato-thalamo-parietal network to mediate core symptoms of DI, i.e. a priori brain regions involved in judgment (frontal cortex), sensory gating (thalamus) and body perception (dorsal striatum, thalamus and somatic cortices). This is also the first report of effective treatment with aripiprazole in drug-induced DI and with ziprasidone in organic DI, adding to existing limited evidence that SGAs are helpful in various forms of DI. Effective antipsychotic treatment seems to depend on blocking striatal D2 receptors with similar occupancy rates as in schizophrenia. Larger samples are needed to confirm our preliminary findings and further evaluate their relevance for the different forms of DI.
Keywords
FDG-PETACCCASLROIrCBFGMVEPIVBMDATFWHMDelusional infestationMRIDopamine transporterDelusional parasitosisSPECTcontinuous arterial spin labelingEcho-planar imagingMagnetic resonance imagingNeuroimagingsingle photon emission computed tomographyPositron emission tomographyRegional cerebral blood flowCranial computed tomographygray matter volumeAntipsychoticsfull-width at half-maximumanterior cingulate cortexregion of interestVoxel based morphometryPET
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Authors
Roland W. Freudenmann, Markus Kölle, Axel Huwe, Markus Luster, Sven Norbert Reske, Markus Huber, Peter Lepping, R. Christian Wolf, Carlos Schönfeldt-Lecuona,