| Literature DB >> 24409143 |
Kimberly R Byrnes1, Colin M Wilson2, Fiona Brabazon3, Ramona von Leden3, Jennifer S Jurgens4, Terrence R Oakes5, Reed G Selwyn2.
Abstract
Traumatic brain injury (TBI) affects an estimated 1.7 million people in the United States and is a contributing factor to one third of all injury related deaths annually. According to the CDC, approximately 75% of all reported TBIs are concussions or considered mild in form, although the number of unreported mild TBIs (mTBI) and patients not seeking medical attention is unknown. Currently, classification of mTBI or concussion is a clinical assessment since diagnostic imaging is typically inconclusive due to subtle, obscure, or absent changes in anatomical or physiological parameters measured using standard magnetic resonance (MR) or computed tomography (CT) imaging protocols. Molecular imaging techniques that examine functional processes within the brain, such as measurement of glucose uptake and metabolism using [(18)F]fluorodeoxyglucose and positron emission tomography (FDG-PET), have the ability to detect changes after mTBI. Recent technological improvements in the resolution of PET systems, the integration of PET with magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), and the availability of normal healthy human databases and commercial image analysis software contribute to the growing use of molecular imaging in basic science research and advances in clinical imaging. This review will discuss the technological considerations and limitations of FDG-PET, including differentiation between glucose uptake and glucose metabolism and the significance of these measurements. In addition, the current state of FDG-PET imaging in assessing mTBI in clinical and preclinical research will be considered. Finally, this review will provide insight into potential critical data elements and recommended standardization to improve the application of FDG-PET to mTBI research and clinical practice.Entities:
Keywords: FDG; clinical research; experimental research; fluorodeoxyglucose; mTBI; positron emission tomography; traumatic brain injury
Year: 2014 PMID: 24409143 PMCID: PMC3885820 DOI: 10.3389/fnene.2013.00013
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Neuroenergetics ISSN: 1662-6427
Figure 1A two-compartment model that symbolizes FDG transport from blood plasma to tissue, as freely available FDG, with subsequent trapping in the cell by phosphorylation to FDG-6-PO. The compartment concentrations of FDG are represented by plasma (Cplasma), interstitial space (Cfree), and cellular (Ccell). K1 is the perfusion constant (ml of blood/g of tissue/min), and k2, k3, and k4 are rate constants (min−1) for diffusion back to blood plasma, phosphorylation of FDG, and de-phosphorylation, respectively. The arrow size represents the relative magnitude of the rate constants. The dashed vertical line indicates the blood-brain-barrier and the dashed arrow indicates the de-phosphorylation of FDG, which is typically insignificant (k4 is 0 for the “irreversible” model).
Figure 2T2-weighted MRI (. Focal tissue damage and associated hyperintense edema is shown extending extracranially in both images.
Figure 3FDG uptake, normalized to sham, at baseline (time 0), 3 and 24 h after a mild LFP showed less variability and greater depression when animals were anesthetized during uptake than when animals were awake during uptake. N = 3/group.
Published studies of mild TBI using FDG-PET.
| Humayun et al., | Mild (GCS 13–15) | MVA | 3–12 months | Post-acute—chronic | 27–40 | Male and female ( | Age and gender matched controls ( | Temporal and frontal cortices | Fasted 4–6 h; 150–250 MBq FDG; blood sampling (arterial); Dynamic 30–60 min PET scan | Task-based | Quantitative; regional MRGlc: glucose metabolic rate for particular region divided by global glucose metabolic rate | Depression in glucose uptake, correlated with neuropsychological assessment |
| Ruff et al., | Mild | Various | 2–49 months post-injury (29.2 ± 14.7) | Chronic | 19–69 (46.2 ± 15) | Male and female ( | Male and female healthy volunteer ( | Cortical and subcortical regions | 30–35 min uptake, static 55 min PET; arterialized venous blood | Task-based | Quantitative; MRGlc: determined as described elsewhere Buchsbaum et al., | Decreased MRGlc primarily in frontal and anteriortemporal regions, correlated with impaired function on neuropsychological tests |
| Roberts et al., | Mild | Whiplash MVA | 4 years | Chronic | 11 | Male child ( | None | Whole brain | Not provided | Not provided | Qualitative; details not provided | Decreased uptake in both temporal lobes and cerebellar hemispheres |
| Gross et al., | Mild | Various (MVA, impact) | 14–61 months (43 ± 15) | Chronic | 12–59 (3.4 ± 14). | Male and female ( | Normal control | Midtemporal, anterior cingulate, precuneus, anterior temporal, frontal white, and corpus callosum brain regions | Dynamic 35 min PET scan | Task-based | Quantitative; MRGlc: determined by Sokoloff et al. ( | Temporal gray and frontal white regions were hyper-metabolic, other regions were hypo-metabolic increased irritability, decreased attention/concentration, and social withdrawal, followed by emotional ability, sleep problems, memory problems, being tired on awakening, headache, and depression in same patients |
| Abu-Judeh et al., | Mild, brief LOC, GCS 15 | MVA | 2 days | Subacute | 28 | Female ( | None | Cortical and basal structures | Static FDG, 60 min after uptake, 85 min scan | Resting | Qualitative; visual inspection | Normal FDG uptake |
| Umile et al., | Mild | Various (falls, MVA) | 42–2846 days (586 days) | Post-acute—chronic | 19–59 (37.2) | Male and female ( | None | Cortex and sub-cortex | 40 min uptake; 5 min PET scan | Resting | Qualitative; visually inspected for abnormalities in both cortical and subcortical structures, and characterized as either normal or abnormal | Abnormalities noted in temporal and frontal lobes; 70% of patients with an abnormal PET measurement showed neuropsychological impairments |
| Chen et al., | Mild | Various (falls, impacts) | 5–35 months (16.6 ± 11.5) | Chronic | 34.4 (11.9) | Male and female | Age and sex matched healthy controls ( | Temporal and frontal cortex | 60-min dynamic study, tone to keep patient awake. No AIF | Resting | Semi-quantitative; FDG Uptake: mean ROI activity normalized to calcarine cortex | No significant difference from controls; neuropsychological impairment not correlated with lack of FDG change |
| Peskind et al., | Mild, repeated | Blast | 2–5 years (3.5 ± 1.2 years) | Chronic | 24–49 (32.0 ± 8.5) | Male ( | Male and female healthy volunteers ( | Whole brain | Standard brain PET; 20 min static emission | Resting | Semi-quantitative; Glucose Uptake (NEUROSTAT) | Decreased MRGlc in the cerebellum, vermis, pons, and medial temporal lobe correlated with subtle impairments in verbal fluency, attention, working memory |
| Petrie et al., | Mild (1–100 blasts) | Blast—impact mTBI | 1.2–7.1 years (3.8 ± 1.5 years) | Chronic | 23–60 (31.6 ± 9.2) | Male ( | Male and female veterans w/out blast-impact TBI ( | Whole brain | No details provided | Resting | Semi-quantitative; Glucose uptake (NEUROSTAT) | Uptake reductions in right and left parietal cortices, left somatosensory cortex, and right visual cortex. Uptake values in parahippocampal gyrus lower for >20 blast mTBIs |
| Mendez et al., | Mild | 12 Blast and 12 blunt (MVA or fall) | Blast: 22–78 months; blunt: 11–77 months | Chronic | 30.5 (±7.97) or 30.64 (±6.50) | Male | 50 NeuroQ database | Superior parietal region | 45-min uptake followed by 15-min static PET scan. | Resting | Semi-quantitative; (neuroQ) mean activity for each auto ROI volume calculated (47) and normalized to mean whole brain pixel activity | Blunt and blast: hypometabolism in several regions (reduced uptake) |
Figure 4Standard FDG-PET images from three clinical TBI cases. (A) 25 y.o. male, single non-blast moderate TBI, imaged 5 months post-injury. No recorded medications or sleep difficulties, pain/headache, or vision problems. FDG-PET shows left temporal hypometabolism associated with mild volume loss/encephalomalacia on the CT. (B) 28 y.o. male, single non-blast severe TBI, imaged 12.5 months post-injury. No recorded medications or sleep difficulties, pain/headache, or vision problems. FDG-PET shows a more severe injury with prominent hypometabolism frontally (arrow) associated with encephalomalacia. (C) 35 y.o. male, history of repeat exposure to blast-related mTBI, imaged 43 months post-injury. Pain medication (ultram), mild body pain, and moderate sleep problems, no findings CT. FDG-PET shows prominent frontal hypermetabolism, which may be medication related. The color bar displayed in (C) applies to all images with red representing greater FDG uptake.
Published preclinical studies of TBI using FDG-PET.
| Moore et al., | Moderate | LFP; 2–2.5 atm | Baseline, 2,5,10 days | Subacute | Adult | Male | Exp1: | Ipsilateral cortex, particularly in frontal and parietal cortex with substantial decreases in caudate/ putamen, thalamus | 2 mCi FDG (tail vein); blood sampling (arterial); 60 min uptake; Static 40 min PET scan | Resting; awake | Quantitative; local MRGlc | Reduced uptake; PET measurements similar to autoradiography measures |
| Mir et al., | Severe | Aspiration of cortex | 3 days, 10 days and 1 month | Subacute chronic | Adult | Male | None | Striatum and thalamus | 2.5 mCi FDG (tail vein); 45 min uptake; Static 45 min PET scan | Resting; awake | Semi-Quantitative; “relative glucose metabolism” ROI—mean signal intensity; %deficit = 1- (lesioned hemisphere ROI)/(non-lesioned hemisphere ROI) *100 | Reduced uptake, slowly recovering over time |
| Frumberg et al., | Severe | Surgical implant | 28 and 58 days | Chronic | Adult | Male | Anesthesia, no cannulation ( | Primary motor, sensory and frontal cortices | 500–700 uCi (IP); 50 min uptake; static 10 min scan; 1 blood sample (end of scan) | Resting; awake | Semi-quantitative; ROI and SPM; global normalization | Reduced uptake, sustained for up to 56 days; also observed consistent impairment in memory function, no correlation analysis |
| Zhang et al., | Moderate | Weight drop, open skull | Baseline, days 1 and 14 | Subacute | N/A | N/A | Sham ( | Cortex | 0.1 mCi FDG (tail vein); 20 min uptake; static 10 min PET scan | Resting; anesthesia | Semi-quantitative; “regional uptake change” ROI—L/N ratio = mean counts per pixel of lesion region of interest/mean counts per pixel of normal homologous contralateral region of interest | L/N ratio reduced by 35% reduction in lesion at 1 day post injury and recovered to 87% by 2 weeks after transplantation but controls increased to 72% |
| Liu et al., | Severe | LFP; 3.2–3.5 atm | 1 week;1, 3, and 6 months | Subacute chronic | 10–17 weeks | Male | Sham ( | Cortex, hippocampus, amygdala | 37–74 MBq (1–2 mCi) FDG (i.p.); 30 min uptake; static 30 min PET scan | Resting; awake | Semi-quantitative; ROI—mean activity normalized to cerebellum mean; SPM—normalized to cerebellum mean | Reduced uptake; volumetric changes in brain; no correlation with function |
| Li et al., | Mild | Linear and angular displacement/weight drop | 24 h, 3 days, 7 days, and 30 days | Acute—chronic | Adult | Male | Sham ( | Hippocampus; sensorimotor cortex, corpus callosum, caudate putamen, and brain stem, cerebellum | 0.4 mCi FDG (tail vein.); static 45 min PET scan starting immediately after FDG injection | Resting | Semi-quantitative; ROI—SUV (normalized for the amount of injected radioactivity and body weight) | Reduced SUV at days 1, 3, and 7 in most ROI's, particularly in sensorimotor cortex; Reductions correlated with cognitive performance at 90 days post-injury |
| Shultz et al., | Severe | LFP; 3.2–3.5 atm | 1 week, 1, 3, and 6 months | Subacute chronic | 8–12 weeks | Male | Sham ( | Hippocampus | 37–74 MBq (1–2 mCi) FDG (i.p.); 30 min uptake; Static 30 min PET scan | Resting | Semi-quantitative; ROI—mean activity; SPM—normalized to cerebellum mean | Hypometabolism at all-time points; Predictive of seizure activity |
| Guan et al., | Mod/Severe | CCI; 2.5 mm depth | 1 month | Chronic | Adult | Male | Four groups of six ( | Lesion epicenter | 22.2 MBq (0.6 mCi) FDG (i.v.); 60 min uptake; static 10 min PET scan | Resting | Semi-quantitative; “relative metabolic activity” ROI—SUV ratio, injured vs. normal hemisphere | Reduced uptake |
| Selwyn et al., | Mild | LFP; 1.2 atm | Baseline, 3 h, 24 h, 5 days, 9 days, 16 days | Acute subacute | Adult | Male | Craniotomy Sham ( | Whole brain | 1.5–2 mCi FDG (tail vein); 45 min uptake; Static 30 min PET scan | Resting; anesthesia | Semi-quantitative; ROI—activity concentration in central and ipsi/contralateral ROIs were divided by the activity concentration measured in the cerebellum ROI, then normalized to baseline reference tissue (cerebellum) | Reduced normalized uptake in whole brain at 3 h, 24 h, and 5 days, return to normal by 15 days; Reduction correlated with astrocyte reactivity |
Figure 5Representative diagram of FDG uptake as measured by PET imaging, normalized to reference region, based on animal modeling. The representative lines are drawn from data from our work on mTBI (Selwyn et al., 2013) and the work of others on moderate to severe TBI (Liu et al., 2010; Shultz et al., 2013).
Published moderate to severe TBI Studies conducted by UCLA with FDG-PET.
| Bergsneider et al., | Severe; GCS 3–8, median GCS 5 | Various | <1 month | Subacute | 36 ± 18 | Male and female ( | No data | Global, regional | Fasted 4 h; 40 min uptake; blood sampling; followed by 40 min. static scan | Resting | Quantitative; MRGlc: using rate constants and LC values from previous studies of normal human gray matter | Global hyperglycolysis in 6 of 6, 5 of 22 patients with presumed regional hyperglycolysis near contusions |
| Bergsneider et al., | Severe comp mild (GCS 3–15); mean GCS 6 | Various, includes 28 patients from 1997 article | 2–27 days, 11 patients rescanned 6–15 months | Subacute—chronic | 36 ± 16 | Male ( | Historical controls | Hemispheric cortical gray matter, orbitofrontal, mesiotemporal, anterior temporal, corpus striatum and thalamus | Same as Bergsneider et al. ( | Resting | Quantitative; MRGlc: using rate constants and LC values from previous studies of normal human gray matter | Reduced global cortical MRGlc (84%), regional reduction, independent of severity; GCS at time of PET correlated poorly with global cortical MRGlc |
| Bergsneider et al., | Severe, Comp mild (GCS 9–15), (GCS 3–8) | Various | 2–39 days; rescanned 6–15 months | Subacute—chronic | 36 ± 17 | Male ( | Historical controls | Global cortical, 14 subregions | Same as Bergsneider et al. ( | Resting | Quantitative; MRGlc: using rate constants and LC values from previous studies of normal human gray matter | One patient with elevated MRGlc at 0–5 days, remainder had reduced global MRGlc at 5–28 days; Modest correlation with neurological disability |
| Hattori et al., | Severe, mod, comp mild (GCS <9 or 9–15) | Various | 17–123 h (62 ± 30 h) | Acute—subacute | 44 ± 18 | Male and female ( | Age and sex matched controls ( | Striatum, thalamus, brain stem (excluding cerebral and cerebellar peduncles), cerebellar cortex, and whole brain, cerebral cortex | Five different sedatives used during PET scan; dynamic acquisition of 18 frames (4 × 30 s, 4 × 120 s, 10 × 300 s) over 60 min. arterial blood sampling | Resting | Quantitative; MRGlc: patlak analysis with different LC used for TBI (0.44) and controls (0.66) | Reduction in global MRGlc and striatum and thalamus; Correlation with level of consciousness at time of scan |
| Hattori et al., | Severe, mod, comp mild GCS <9, 9–15 with positive CT findings | MVA, fall, gunshot | 0–5 days (3.1 ± 2.1 days) | Acute—subacute | 44 ± 16 | Male and female ( | Normal volunteers ( | Contusional, pericontusional, and remote regions | Fasted 4 h, dynamic PET scan, 18 frames over 60 min, serial blood sampling | Resting | Quantitative; MRGlc: nonlinear least squares fitting to estimate uptake constants and blood volume; LC derived from Wu et al. ( | Heterogeneous FDG uptake in perilesion (increase and decrease); lower |
| Wu et al., | Severe, mod, comp mild GCS < 9, 9–14 with positive CT findings | MVA, fall, unknown | 0–4 days (2 days) | Acute—subacute | 43 ± 23 | Male and female ( | Normal volunteers ( | Global and regional LC studied. Gray matter (GM), white matter (WM) and whole brain | Intubated and ventilated during PET study. Dynamic sequence with 18 frames over 60 min. AIF and plasma glucose sampled | Resting | Quantitative; MRGlc: determined using the measured LC and cerebral uptake rate | GM/WM ratio reduced, global LC reduced, MRGlc reduced in GM but not WM; GM/WM ratios of MRGlc correlated with GCS, higher ratios showed good recovery 12 months after TBI |
| Wu et al., | Severe, Mod GCS 7 (4–10) | MVA, blunt, fall | 0–5 days (2 days) | Acute—subacute | 17–64 (35 ± 14) | Male and female ( | Normal volunteers ( | Whole brain, contusion, pericontusion, GM, and WM | Same as Wu et al. ( | Resting | Quantitative; MRGlc: determined using the measured LC and cerebral uptake rate | Reduced whole brain MRGlc, GM reduced but WM slight increase; nonoxidative utilization of glucose in WM |
| Vespa et al., | Severe, Mod (GCS <9 or positive CT and GCS <13) | Unknown | 12–115 h | Acute—subacute | 15–57 | Male and female ( | None | 1.5–2 cm below dura, white matter, frontal lobe region | Same as Wu et al. ( | Resting | Quantitative; MRGlc: determined using the measured LC and cerebral uptake rate; CMRO2; Lactate/pyruvate ratio (LPR) | LPR increases correlate with nonischemic reduction in oxygen utilization with no significant correlations with MRGlc |
| Vespa et al., | Severe, GCS 6.7 ± 1.2 | Unknown | <5 days | Acute—subacute | No data | Male and female ( | Patients with seizure ( | Global, hippocampus, gray matter | Dynamic blood sampling referenced Vespa et al. ( | Resting | Quantitative; MRGlc: determined using the measured LC and cerebral uptake rate | Increase in MRGlc in right hippocampus during ictal, greater than interictal or nonictal |
| Xu et al., | Severe, mod, comp mild (GCS <8 or 9–15 with CT finding) | Various | 1–16 days (5.4 ± 3.7 days) | Acute—subacute | 33 ± 15 | Male and female ( | Normal volunteers ( | Global; frontal lobes | Scan details not provided, Bergsneider et al. ( | Resting | Quantitative; MRGlc: determined using the measured LC and cerebral uptake rate | Correlation between atrophy of frontal lobe and MRGlc |
| Wu et al., | Severe, mod (GCS 6–13) | Various | 18–100 h | Acute—subacute | 17–81 | Male ( | Normal controls | Peri-contusion/contusion | Wu et al., | Resting | Quantitative; MRGlc: determined using the measured LC and cerebral uptake rate | Reduced near epicenter; pericontusion showed elevation |
Other published moderate to severe TBI studies using FDG-PET.
| Mattioli et al., | Severe, positive CT, amnesia | Run over by lorry | 2 years | Chronic | 48 | Female ( | Normal volunteer ( | Hippocampus, cingulate cortex | Arterial blood sampling from injection to 70 min. PET scan conducted from 45–70 min | Resting | Quantitative; MRGlc: determined using rate constants and LC from Reivich et al. ( | Bilateral reduction of MRGlc in hippocampus and anterior cingulate cortex |
| Alavi et al., | Severe, mod, mild, GCS 3–14 (mean 9) | Various | 3 days–5.5 months repeat study at 2 weeks–3.5 years | Subacute—chronic | 18–59 (mea | Male and female ( | Database of normal PET studies | Ipsilateral and contralateral cerebellar hypometabolism | FDG-PET based on prior work using transverse PET (PETT-V), | Resting | Qualitative; cerebellar hypometabolism (visual inspection): both hemispheres compared each other, as well as to other structures throughout the brain | Crossed cerebral diaschisis observed in patients with focal cortical or extraparenchymal injuries. Significance is correlated with injury severity. Not observed in patients with diffuse injury |
| Lombardi et al., | Severe (7 of 8 experienced coma) | Closed head injury, various | 5 months–21 years (7.3 years) | Chronic | 25–39 | Male ( | None | Dorsolateral prefrontal cortex (DLPFC), putamen, frontal poles, caudate | 2–3 h after meal, 30-min ACPT task during uptake in scanner, four scans over the next 30 min with arterial blood sampling | Task-based | Quantitative; MRGlc: determined by Sokoloff et al. ( | Correlation between an increase in preservative responses on WCST and a decrease in MRGlc in right dorsolateral frontal subcortical circuit during attention task |
| Fontaine et al., | Severe, GCS < 9 | MVA | 60–350 days | Post-acute—chronic | 17–36 (24.8 ± 4.7) | Male and female ( | Normal volunteers ( | 39 MRI-defined regions | FDG uptake at rest with arterial blood sampling | Resting | Quantitative; MRGlc: determined by Sokoloff et al. ( | Correlation between cognitive and behavioral disorders and reduced cortical metabolism in cingulate gyrus and prefrontal gyrus |
| O'Connell et al., | Severe, sedated, ventilated, ICP monitoring | Not reported | 24 h, 1–4 days, >4 days | Acute—subacute | 17–65 | Male and female ( | None | 20 mm ROI near ICP sensor, frontal cerebral parenchyma, 30 mm depth | Dynamic 3D PET, arterial blood sampled | Resting | Quantitative; MRGlc using Huang operational equation | Increase in glucose utilization associated with increases in dialysate lactate, pyruvate, lactate/glucose ratio, and pyruvate/glucose ratio |
| Nakayama et al., | Severe | MVA | 18.6 ± 16.2 months | Chronic | 33.2 ± 12.5 | Male and female ( | Normal volunteers ( | Whole brain | Fasted for 4 h, 40 min uptake during rest, 2D static pet scan for 7 min | Resting | Semi-quantitative; glucose uptake (SPM): images were scaled to maximum intensity voxel | Reduced uptake in medial prefrontal region, medial frontobasal region, anterior and posterior regions of cingulate gyrus and thalamus. Reduction correlated with consciousness or cognitive dysfunction |
| Kato et al., | Severe to mod (diffuse with visible contusion) GCS 9.9 | Motor vehicle accident (MVA) | 16.7+/- 10.2 months (6–38 months) | Chronic | 20–50 (36.3 ± 9.8 mean) | Male and female | Gender and age-matched controls | Cingulate gyrus, frontal gyrus | Fasted prior; Resting static scan after 40 min uptake; 7 min scan | Resting | Semi-quantitative; “metabolism” (normalized uptake): image intensity (activity) proportionally scaled using mean global brain activity | Reduced, normalized uptake in bilateral frontal lobes, temporal lobes, thalamus, right cerebellum; Full scale IQ correlated with regional metabolism |
| Hutchinson et al., | Severe, mod, GCS 3–13 | Not reported | 0–8 days | Acute—subacute | 17–66 (43.4 ± 15.3) | Male and female ( | None | 20 mm ROI around microdialysis catheter tip, in frontal parenchyma | Dynamic 3D PET, 15 frames over 55 min, 14 arterial blood samples | Resting | Quantitative; MRGlc: huang, Patlak, and 3 and 4 rate constant methods compared. LC was 0.437 | MRGlc showed positive linear relationship with lactate and pyruvate |
| Lull et al., | Severe, GCS < 9 | Various | 47.6 ± 46.8 days | Post-acute | 16–65 | Male and female ( | Normal volunteers ( | Thalamus | Fasting 4–6 h, blood glucose sampled, resting uptake 30 min followed by 10 min 3D static PET | Resting | Semi-quantitative; glucose uptake (SPM): images were scaled to maximum intensity voxel | Patients with lower consciousness had lower thalamic glucose uptake |
| Lull et al., | Severe, GCS = 8 | Various | 459.4 ± 470.9 days | Chronic | 33.1 ± 11.6 and 27.3 ± 11.1 | Male and female ( | Normal volunteers ( | Thalamus | Fasting for 6 h, resting uptake, 30-60 min uptake followed by 10 min 3D static PET | Resting | Semi-quantitative; glucose uptake (SPM): images were scaled to maximum intensity voxel | Patients with lower consciousness had lower thalamic glucose uptake |
| Zhang et al., | Severe, mod, mild, GCS 4–15 (mean 13.7 for 32/81), 40 negative imaging findings | MVA, falls, blunt object | 0–11 years (3.5 ± 2.3 years) | Chronic | 20–74 (49.8 ± 11.4) | Male and female ( | Normal volunteers ( | Whole brain analysis. | 30 min uptake during a verbal learning test. PET scan details not provided | Task-based | Semi-quantitative; Relative FDG uptake: ratio of the FDG uptake at each voxel to the FDG uptake of the whole brain | Lower relative uptake in frontal, temporal, parietal, occipital, and thalamus. Elevated uptake in cingulate gyrus, hippocampus, amygdala |
| Garcia-Panach et al., | Severe, vegetative, amnesia | Various | >200 days | Chronic | 16–65 | Male and female ( | Normal volunteers ( | Thalamus, precuneus, frontal and temporal lobes | Lull et al. ( | Resting | Semi-quantitative; “metabolic differences”(SPM): | Differences in glucose metabolism in all regions were correlated with neurological outcome. Decreased cortico-cortical metabolism predicted less favorable outcomes |