1. [Investigations on the effect of 'ecstasy' on cerebral glucose metabolism: an 18-FDG PET study]
- Author
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M, Schreckenberger, E, Gouzoulis-Mayfrank, O, Sabri, C, Arning, T, Tuttass, G, Schulz, H J, Kaiser, G, Wagenknecht, H, Sass, and U, Büll
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,Brain Mapping ,N-Methyl-3,4-methylenedioxyamphetamine ,Administration, Oral ,Brain ,Middle Aged ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Glucose ,Double-Blind Method ,Fluorodeoxyglucose F18 ,Hallucinogens ,Humans ,Female ,Radiopharmaceuticals ,Tomography, Emission-Computed - Abstract
The aim of the present study was to determine the acute effects of the "Ecstasy" analogue MDE (3, 4-methylendioxyethamphetamine) on the cerebral glucose metabolism (rMRGlu) of healthy volunteers.In a randomised double-blind trial, 16 healthy volunteers without a history of drug abuse were examined with 18-FDG PET 110-120 minutes after oral administration of 2 mg/kg MDE (n = 8) or placebo (n = 8). Beginning two minutes prior to radiotracer injection, a constant cognitive stimulation was maintained for 32 minutes using a word repetition paradigm in order to ensure constant and comparable mental conditions during cerebral 18-FDG uptake. Individual brain anatomy was represented using T1-weighted 3D flash MRI, followed by manual regionalisation into 108 regions-of-interest and PFT/MRI overlay. Absolute quantification of rMRGlu and comparison of glucose metabolism under MDE versus placebo were performed using Mann-Whitney U-test.Absolute global MRGlu was not significantly changed under MDE versus placebo (MDE: 41.8 +/- 11.1 mumol/min/100 g, placebo: 50.1 +/- 18.1 mumol/min/100 g, p = 0.298). The normalised regional metabolic data showed a significantly decreased rMRGlu in the bilateral frontal cortex: left frontal posterior (-7.1%, p0.05) and right prefrontal superior (-4.6%, p0.05). On the other hand, rMRGlu was significantly increased in the bilateral cerebellum (right: +10.1%, p0.05; left +7.6%, p0.05) and in the right putamen (+6.2%, p0.05).The present study revealed acute neurometabolic changes under the "Ecstasy" analogon MDE indicating a fronto-striato-cerebellar dysbalance with parallels to other psychotropic substances and various endogenous psychoses respectively.
- Published
- 1998