| Literature DB >> 28791334 |
Roger L Albin1,2,3, Christine Minderovic4, Robert A Koeppe3,4.
Abstract
Considerable prior work suggests basal ganglia dysfunction in Tourette syndrome (TS). Analysis of a small number of postmortem specimens suggests deficits of some striatal interneuron populations, including striatal cholinergic interneurons. To assess the integrity of striatal cholinergic interneurons in TS, we used [18F]FEOBV positron emission tomography (PET) to quantify striatal vesicular acetylcholine transporter (VAChT) expression, a measure of cholinergic terminal density, in human TS and control subjects. We found no evidence of striatal cholinergic deficits. Discrepant imaging and postmortem analysis results may reflect agonal or postmortem changes, medication effects, or significant disease heterogeneity.Entities:
Keywords: Acetylcholine; Striatum; Tourette Syndrome; VChAT
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28791334 PMCID: PMC5547197 DOI: 10.1523/ENEURO.0178-17.2017
Source DB: PubMed Journal: eNeuro ISSN: 2373-2822
Clinical characteristics of subjects
1 TS not different from NC; p = 0.42; two-tailed t test.
2 Possible or definite TS/Tics.
3 Not applicable.
4 TS different from NC; p < 0.0001; nondirectional Mann–Whitney U test.
5 TS different from NC; p < 0.05; nondirectional Mann–Whitney U test.

Figure 1. Striatal cholinergic terminal density measured by [18F]FEOBV PET in control (top row) and TS (bottom row) subjects. Averaged images from all subjects and images thresholded to optimize visualization of striatal [18F]FEOBV binding. No difference in striatal [18F]FEOBV binding between TS and NC subjects.
Striatal [1
| Mean caudate BP (SD) | Mean putamen BP (SD) | |
|---|---|---|
| TS ( | 8.1016 (2.4500) | 9.2805 (2.7901) |
| Normal control ( | 7.8982 (0.9475) | 9.1135 (1.0031) |
| TS % difference from control | 102.6% | 101.8% |
| 0.3974 | 0.4248 |
1 Two-tailed t test.