Literature DB >> 18509037

Methamphetamine causes microglial activation in the brains of human abusers.

Yoshimoto Sekine1, Yasuomi Ouchi, Genichi Sugihara, Nori Takei, Etsuji Yoshikawa, Kazuhiko Nakamura, Yasuhide Iwata, Kenji J Tsuchiya, Shiro Suda, Katsuaki Suzuki, Masayoshi Kawai, Kiyokazu Takebayashi, Shigeyuki Yamamoto, Hideo Matsuzaki, Takatoshi Ueki, Norio Mori, Mark S Gold, Jean L Cadet.   

Abstract

Methamphetamine is a popular addictive drug whose use is associated with multiple neuropsychiatric adverse events and toxic to the dopaminergic and serotonergic systems of the brain. Methamphetamine-induced neuropathology is associated with increased expression of microglial cells that are thought to participate in either pro-toxic or protective mechanisms in the brain. Although reactive microgliosis has been observed in animal models of methamphetamine neurotoxicity, no study has reported on the status of microglial activation in human methamphetamine abusers. The present study reports on 12 abstinent methamphetamine abusers and 12 age-, gender-, and education-matched control subjects who underwent positron emission tomography using a radiotracer for activated microglia, [(11)C](R)-(1-[2-chlorophenyl]-N-methyl-N-[1-methylpropyl]-3-isoquinoline carboxamide) ([(11)C](R)-PK11195). Compartment analysis was used to estimate quantitative levels of binding potentials of [(11)C](R)-PK11195 in brain regions with dopaminergic and/or serotonergic innervation. The mean levels of [(11)C](R)-PK11195 binding were higher in methamphetamine abusers than those in control subjects in all brain regions (>250% higher; p < 0.01 for all). In addition, the binding levels in the midbrain, striatum, thalamus, and orbitofrontal and insular cortices (p < 0.05) correlated inversely with the duration of methamphetamine abstinence. These results suggest that chronic self-administration of methamphetamine can cause reactive microgliosis in the brains of human methamphetamine abusers, a level of activation that appears to subside over longer periods of abstinence.

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Year:  2008        PMID: 18509037      PMCID: PMC2491906          DOI: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.1179-08.2008

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Neurosci        ISSN: 0270-6474            Impact factor:   6.167


  46 in total

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