OBJECTIVE: Positron emission tomography and the fluorodeoxyglucose (FDG)
method were used to determine the brain's metabolic response to neuroleptic
challenge in a normal, disease-free state. METHOD: FDG measurements were
obtained before and 12 hours after administration of 5 mg of haloperidol to
12 young normal men. These values were compared with test-retest FDG
measures obtained from nine normal male control subjects who received no
drug intervention. RESULTS: After haloperidol administration, the
haloperidol subjects showed significantly lower glucose utilization in the
neocortex, limbic cortex, thalamus, and caudate nucleus but not in the
putamen or cerebellum. After adjustment for global effects, significant
reductions were still evident in the frontal, occipital, and anterior
cingulate cortex, whereas the putamen and cerebellum showed significant
increases. CONCLUSIONS: This study, measuring the brain's metabolic
response to acute receptor blockade, is a first step in the development of
an assay of CNS pharmacological activity. By determining the response to
neuroleptic challenge in a normal state, the study establishes a comparison
group for determining response to challenge in various psychiatric
conditions.Abstract Teaser