• Title of article

    Imaging brain cholinergic activity with positron emission tomography: its role in the evaluation of cholinergic treatments in Alzheimer’s dementia

  • Author/Authors

    Nora D. Volkow، نويسنده , , Yu-Shin Ding، نويسنده , , Joanna S. Fowler، نويسنده , , Samuel J. Gatley، نويسنده ,

  • Issue Information
    روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2001
  • Pages
    10
  • From page
    211
  • To page
    220
  • Abstract
    One of the strategies in the treatment of Alzheimer’s disease is the use of drugs that enhance cholinergic brain function, since it is believed that cholinergic dysfunction is one of the factors that contributes to cognitive deterioration. Positron emission tomography is a medical imaging method that can be used to measure the concentration, kinetics, and distribution of cholinergic-enhancing drugs directly in the human brain and assess the effects of the drugs at markers of cholinergic cell viability (vesicular transporters, acetylcholinesterase), at muscarininc and nicotinic receptors, at extracellular acetylcholine, at markers of brain function (glucose metabolism and blood flow), and on amyloid plaque burden in vivo in the brains of patients with Alzheimer’s disease. In addition, these measures can be applied to assess the drugs’ pharmacokinetic and pharmacodynamic properties in the human brain. Since the studies are done in living human subjects, positron emission tomography can evaluate the relationship between the drugs’ biological, behavioral, and cognitive effects; monitor changes in brain function in response to chronic treatment; and determine if pharmacologic interventions are neuroprotective. Moreover, because positron emission tomography has the potential to identify Alzheimer’s disease during early disease, it can be used to establish whether early interventions can prevent or delay further development.
  • Keywords
    nicotinic receptors , muscarinic receptors , Cholinesterase , amyloid , FDG
  • Journal title
    Biological Psychiatry
  • Serial Year
    2001
  • Journal title
    Biological Psychiatry
  • Record number

    501410