Patterns of local cerebral glucose utilization were measured with positron emission, computed tomography using the 18F-fluorodeoxyglucose method in 13 patients with Huntington's disease (HD), 15 subjects at risk for HD, and 40 normal control subjects. These data were compared with computed tomographic measures of cerebral atrophy, with age, and with duration and severity of symptoms. The results indicate that in HD there is a characteristic decrease in glucose utilization in the caudate and putamen and that this local hypometabolism appears early and precedes bulk tissue loss. In contrast to patients with senile dementia, in these HD patients glucose utilization typically was normal throughout the rest of the brain, regardless of the severity of symptoms and despite apparent shrinkage of brain tissue. Our results suggest the possibility that the caudate may be hypometabolic in some asymptomatic subjects who are potential carriers of the autosomal dominant gene for HD.
By means of emission computed tomography (ECT), we used 18F-fluorodeoxyglucose (18FDG) and 13N-ammonia (13NH3) as indicators of abnormalities in local cerebral glucose utilization (LCMRglc) and relative perfusion, respectively. The ECAT positron tomograph was used to scan normal control subject and 10 stroke patients at various times during recovery. In normal subjects, mean CMRglc was 5.28 +/- 0.76 mg per 100 gm tissue per minute (mean +/- SD; N = 8). In patients with stroke, mean CMRglc in the contralateral hemisphere was moderately decreased during the first week, profoundly depressed in irreversible coma, and normal after clinical recovery. Quantification was restricted by incomplete understanding of tracer behavior in diseased brain, but relative local distributions of 18FDG and 13NH3 trapping qualitatively reflected the increases and decreases as well as coupling and uncoupling expected for local alterations in glucose utilization and perfusion in stroke. Early after cerebrovascular occlusion there was a greater decrease in local trapping of 13NH3, than 18FDG within the infarct, probably because of increased anaerobic glycolysis. Otherwise, 18FDG was a more sensitive indicator of cerebral dysfunction than was 13NH3. Hypometabolism, due to deactivation or minimal damage, was demonstrated with the 18FDG scan in deep structures and broad zones of cerebral cortex that appeared normal on x-ray computed tomography and technetium 99m pertechnetate scans. In its present state of development, the 18FDG ECT method should aid in defining the location and extent of altered brain in studies of disordered function after stroke. With improved knowledge of tracer behaviour in diseased brain, the method has promise for mapping the response to therapeutic intervention and increasing our understanding of how the human brain responds to stroke.
The loading of tissue with iodine can result in the enhancement of the radiation dose absorbed from low-energy x-ray or gamma ray sources. We have explored the potential of this phenomenon for radiation therapy. We have demonstrated the effect of iodine concentration and radiation quality on this dose enhancement in lymphocytes, we have calculated the effect of such enhancement on depth dose distributions in the brain, we have estimated the iodine content in two human brain tumors during computerized tomography (CT) scans, we have studied the dispersion of the iodine contrast media after direct injection into rabbit tumors, and we have demonstrated that the combination of x-ray and contrast media injection is far more effective than either agent alone in causing the regression of mouse tumors. These results suggest that there may be a therapeutic advantage from loading tumors with iodine and treating them with low-energy photons.
The treatment of 13 patients with bacterial intracranial aneurysms is reported. The incidence of bacterial intracranial aneurysms was 4% of all patients admitted with intracranial aneurysms and 3% of all patients admitted with bacterial endocarditis. Each patient had neurological signs or symptoms suggestive of intracranial disease prior to the diagnosis of an aneurysm. Alpha Streptococcus was the most common infecting organism. All patients were treated with specific, high-dose antibiotics, and five patients underwent surgery as well. There were no surgical deaths. Six of eight nonsurgically treated patients died. A review of the literature confirms a high mortality for patients treated with only antibiotics, and a low mortality for elective surgery. The authors conclude that 1) patients with bacterial endocarditis, who develop sudden severe headache, focal neurological signs or symptoms, or seizures, should undergo serial cerebral angiography every 7 to 10 days throughout their hospitalization; 2) if an aneurysm is identified it should be excised whenever possible; and 3) patients with proximal or multiple aneurysms should be considered for surgery.
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