Dopamine blockade and clinical response: evidence for two biological subgroups of schizophrenia
1989; American Psychiatric Association; Volume: 146; Issue: 7 Linguagem: Inglês
10.1176/ajp.146.7.905
ISSN1535-7228
AutoresAdam Wolkin, F Barouche, A. P. Wolf, John Rotrosen, John Sinclair Lawrence Fowler, Chyng‐Yann Shiue, Thomas B. Cooper, Jonathan D. Brodie,
Tópico(s)Advanced MRI Techniques and Applications
ResumoBecause CNS neuroleptic concentration cannot be directly measured in patients, the relation between clinical response and extent of dopamine receptor blockade is unknown. This relationship is critical in ascertaining whether nonresponse to neuroleptics is the result merely of inadequate CNS drug levels or of more basic biological differences in pathophysiology. Using [18F]N-methylspiroperidol and positron emission tomography, the authors assessed dopamine receptor occupancy in 10 schizophrenic patients before and after treatment with haloperidol. Responders and nonresponders had virtually identical indices of [18F]N-methylspiroperidol uptake after treatment, indicating that failure to respond clinically was not a function of neuroleptic uptake or binding in the CNS.
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