Article

A single photon emission computerised tomography study of regional brain function in elderly patients with major depression and with Alzheimer-type dementia

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Citation

Curran SM, Murray CM, Van Beck M, Dougall N, O'Carroll R, Austin M, Ebmeier KP & Goodwin GM (1993) A single photon emission computerised tomography study of regional brain function in elderly patients with major depression and with Alzheimer-type dementia. British Journal of Psychiatry, 163 (2), pp. 155-165. https://doi.org/10.1192/bjp.163.2.155

Abstract
The uptake, at rest, of 99mTc-exametazime into different brain regions was compared using SPECT for 20 elderly subjects with major depressive disorder, 20 with Alzheimer-type dementia, and 30 age-matched normal volunteers. Uptake was referred to calcarine-occipital cortex as a reference sensory area. Cross-sectional differences between the three groups were highly statistically significant, but reflected primarily the reductions in cortical uptake in the Alzheimer group. A detailed comparison of depressed patients and controls identified decrements in anterior cingulate, temporal and frontal cortex and in caudate and thalamus in men only. These decrements were correlated with impairment of performance on a trail-making task, but were also associated with continuing treatment with antidepressants or benzodiazepines. However, most depressed patients had quantitatively normal scans for posterior parietal association cortex, and this suggests that SPECT may find a limited role in the differential diagnosis of depression and dementia. The reduced brain function in some depressed patients may parallel the findings from studies of brain structure in elderly depressives; there was between good outcome at 6-18 months and increased tracer uptake in subcortical areas.

Journal
British Journal of Psychiatry: Volume 163, Issue 2

StatusPublished
Publication date31/08/1993
URLhttp://hdl.handle.net/1893/10306
PublisherThe Royal College of Psychiatrists
ISSN0007-1250

People (1)

People

Professor Ronan O'Carroll

Professor Ronan O'Carroll

Professor, Psychology

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