Local cerebral glucose metabolic rates in obsessive-compulsive disorder. A comparison with rates in unipolar depression and in normal
controls
Source: Arch Gen Psychiatry
1987 Mar;44(3):211-218.
Author: Baxter LR;Phelps ME;Mazziotta JC;Guze BH;Schwartz JM;Selin CE PubMed ID: 3493749
Abstract:
We studied 14 patients with obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD) by
positron emission tomography and the fluorodeoxyglucose method, looking
for abnormalities in local cerebral metabolic rates for glucose in brain
structures that have been hypothesized to function abnormally in OCD.
These patients were compared with 14 normal controls and 14 patients
with unipolar depression. The patients with unipolar depression and OCD
did not differ in levels of anxiety, tension, or depression. In OCD,
metabolic rates were significantly increased in the left orbital gyrus
and bilaterally in the caudate nuclei. This was apparent on all
statistical comparisons with both controls and unipolar depression. The
right orbital gyrus showed at least a trend to an increased metabolic
rate in all comparisons. The metabolic rate in the left orbital gyrus,
relative to that in the ipsilateral hemisphere (orbital gyrus/hemisphere
ratio), was significantly elevated compared to controls and subjects
with unipolar depression, and stayed high even with successful drug
treatment. Though it was in the normal range in the morbid state, with
improvement in OCD symptoms after drug treatment, the caudate/hemisphere
metabolic ratio increased uniformly and significantly bilaterally. This
ratio did not increase in patients who did not respond to treatment.
Thus, OCD showed cerebral glucose metabolic patterns that differed from
controls in both the symptomatic and recovered states