Literature DB >> 1984003

Metabolic maturation of the brain: a study of local cerebral glucose utilization in the developing cat.

H T Chugani1, D A Hovda, J R Villablanca, M E Phelps, W F Xu.   

Abstract

Previously, using positron emission tomography (PET), we showed that local cerebral metabolic rates for glucose (lCMRglc) in children undergo dynamic maturational trends before reaching adult values. In order to develop an animal model that can be used to explore the biological significance of the different segments of the lCMRglc maturational curve, we measured lCMRglc in kittens at various stages of postnatal development and in adult cats using quantitative [14C]2-deoxyglucose autoradiography. In the kitten, very low lCMRglc levels (0.14 to 0.53 mumol min-1 g-1) were seen during the first 15 days of life, with phylogenetically older brain regions being generally more metabolically mature than newer structures. After 15 days of age, many brain regions (particularly telencephalic structures) underwent sharp increases of lCMRglc to reach, or exceed, adult rates by 60 days. This developmental period (15 to 60 days) corresponds to the time of rapid synaptic proliferation known to occur in the cat. At 90 and 120 days, a slight decline in lCMRglc was observed, but this was followed by a second, larger peak occurring at about 180 days, when sexual maturation occurs in the cat. Only after 180 days did lCMRglc decrease to reach final adult values (0.21 to 2.04 mumol min-1 g-1). In general, there was good correlation between the metabolic maturation of various neuroanatomical regions and the emergence of behaviors mediated by the specific region. At least in the kitten visual cortex, which has been extensively studied with respect to developmental plasticity, the "critical period" corresponded to that portion of the lCMRglc maturational curve surrounding the 60-day metabolic peak. These normal maturational lCMRglc data will serve as baseline values with which to compare anatomical and metabolic plasticity changes induced by age-related lesions in the cat.

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Year:  1991        PMID: 1984003     DOI: 10.1038/jcbfm.1991.4

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Cereb Blood Flow Metab        ISSN: 0271-678X            Impact factor:   6.200


  21 in total

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Authors:  M E Phelps
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8.  Extinction of behavior in infant rats: development of functional coupling between septal, hippocampal, and ventral tegmental regions.

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9.  Repeated fluorodeoxyglucose positron emission tomography of the brain in infants with suspected hypoxic-ischaemic brain injury.

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