| Literature DB >> 23894238 |
Can Ficicioglu1, Jacob G Dubroff, Nina Thomas, Paul R Gallagher, Jessica Burfield, Christie Hussa, Rebecca Randall, Hongming Zhuang.
Abstract
BACKGROUND ANDEntities:
Keywords: fluorodeoxyglucose positron emission tomography; phenylketonuria; sapropterin
Year: 2013 PMID: 23894238 PMCID: PMC3722466 DOI: 10.3988/jcn.2013.9.3.151
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Clin Neurol ISSN: 1738-6586 Impact factor: 3.077
Baseline characteristics of study subjects
Neuropsychological findings in 5 subjects before and after sapropterin therapy
**p-value from Wilcoxon test.
CPT-II: Conners' Continuous Performance Test, D-KEFS: Delis-Kaplan Executive Function System Verbal Fluency subtest, HVLT: Hopkins Verbal Learning Test, PASAT: Paced Auditory Serial Addition Task, SDMT: Symbol-Digit Modalities Test, WAIS-IV: Wechsler Adult Intelligence Scale-Fourth Edition Digit Span subtest, WMS-IV: Wechsler Memory Scale-Fourth Edition Symbol Span subtest.
Pre sapropterin FDG-PET scan findings
FDG-PET: fluorodeoxyglucose positron emission tomography, ROI: regions of interest.
Changes in PET scan findings after 4 month-sapropterin therapy
ROI: regions of interest.
Fig. 1Representative [F-18] FDG-PET transaxial images throughout the cortices (A, C, E and G) and mid-brain (B, D, F and H). [F-18] FDG-PET regions of interest are shown in (A) and (B) as determined by Philips NeuroQ (version 3.0) as well as corresponding locations in a representative normal brain (C and D) and one of this study's participants before (E and F) and after (G and H) Sapropterin supplementation (126 days). Note the purple shaded region in (A) designates Broca's area in which a significant increase in glucose metabolism was found in response to therapy. Tracer uptake intensity color legend is shown to the right of the images (red/yellow=highest, black/violet=lowest). Note the depressed glucose metabolism in the frontal cortices relative to the parietal cortices in the PKU patient (E-H) compared to the normal example (C and D). This pattern was present in all patients. FDG-PET: fluorodeoxyglucose positron emission tomography.