PURPOSE: To determine whether neurochemical activation of the N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA) receptor-gated ion channel shows quantitative changes, measured as binding of 11C-labeled (S)-[N-methyl]ketamine, in patients with medial temporal lobe epilepsy (MTLE). METHODS: Eight patients with MTLE who were evaluated regarding epilepsy surgery underwent positron emission tomography (PET) with (S)-[N-methyl-11C]ketamine. The presurgical investigations included magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), PET with 18F-fluoro-deoxyglucose (18FDG), and seizure monitoring by using video-EEG. The uptake of (S)-[N-methyl-11C]ketamine in the temporal lobe of ictal onset was compared with the contralateral side and correlated to changes in regional glucose metabolism measured by PET with 18FDG. RESULTS: (S)-[N-methyl-11C]ketamine rapidly reached the brain, and high radioactivities were measured in the striatum, thalamic nuclei, and cortical regions. Overall the brain uptake and regional binding potentials of (S)-[N-methyl-11C]ketamine were similar to measurements observed previously in healthy controls. However, 20 min after administration, when blood flow influence was negligible, a side-to-side comparison revealed a 9-34% reduction of tracer radioactivity in the temporal lobes of ictal onset. At earlier times, the differences in binding potentials were less pronounced, 9-21%. The magnitude and distribution of the reduction were similar to the metabolic pattern seen on PET scans with 18FDG. CONCLUSIONS: Radioactivity uptake of intravenously administered (S)-[N-methyl-11C]ketamine was reduced in temporal lobes of ictal in patients with TLE. This may reflect reduced NMDA-receptor density, reduced perfusion, focal atrophy, or other factors.
PURPOSE: To determine whether neurochemical activation of the N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA) receptor-gated ion channel shows quantitative changes, measured as binding of 11C-labeled (S)-[N-methyl]ketamine, in patients with medial temporal lobe epilepsy (MTLE). METHODS: Eight patients with MTLE who were evaluated regarding epilepsy surgery underwent positron emission tomography (PET) with (S)-[N-methyl-11C]ketamine. The presurgical investigations included magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), PET with 18F-fluoro-deoxyglucose (18FDG), and seizure monitoring by using video-EEG. The uptake of (S)-[N-methyl-11C]ketamine in the temporal lobe of ictal onset was compared with the contralateral side and correlated to changes in regional glucose metabolism measured by PET with 18FDG. RESULTS:(S)-[N-methyl-11C]ketamine rapidly reached the brain, and high radioactivities were measured in the striatum, thalamic nuclei, and cortical regions. Overall the brain uptake and regional binding potentials of (S)-[N-methyl-11C]ketamine were similar to measurements observed previously in healthy controls. However, 20 min after administration, when blood flow influence was negligible, a side-to-side comparison revealed a 9-34% reduction of tracer radioactivity in the temporal lobes of ictal onset. At earlier times, the differences in binding potentials were less pronounced, 9-21%. The magnitude and distribution of the reduction were similar to the metabolic pattern seen on PET scans with 18FDG. CONCLUSIONS: Radioactivity uptake of intravenously administered (S)-[N-methyl-11C]ketamine was reduced in temporal lobes of ictal in patients with TLE. This may reflect reduced NMDA-receptor density, reduced perfusion, focal atrophy, or other factors.
Authors: Vijay Dhawan; William Robeson; David Bjelke; Thomas Chaly; Kristin Graf; Matthew Hellman; Limei Zhuo; Meggan Mackay; David Eidelberg Journal: J Nucl Med Date: 2015-04-30 Impact factor: 10.057
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