Given evidence for excessive striatal dopamine activity in schizophrenia, we sought to test the hypothesis that dopaminergic innervation in the striatum is abnormally elevated, and a secondary hypothesis that age-related loss is accelerated. Twelve schizophrenic subjects on stable doses of medications, along with 12 age and sex-matched healthy control subjects, underwent positron emission tomography (PET) studies with [ 11 C]dihydrotetrabenazine (DTBZ), which binds to the vesicular monoamine transporter, type 2 (VMAT2).Since the 1960's, indirect evidence has implicated dopamine systems in schizophrenia and psychosis (Angrist et al. 1974;Creese et al. 1976;Seeman 1987;Snyder 1972). In the last 10 years, neuroimaging studies targeting dopamine systems have begun to characterize the role of dopamine in schizophrenia, although many questions remain. In vivo studies using radioligands which bind to post-synaptic dopamine receptors have provided equivocal evidence for abnormalities of striatal receptors. Some investigators have reported greater receptor density (Gjedde et al. 1996;Wong et al. 1986), whereas many groups have failed to replicate these findings (Farde et al. 1990;Hietala et al. 1994;Nordstrom et al. 1995;Pilowsky et al. 1994).A more successful approach has been to measure the change in radioligand binding after the manipulation of synaptic dopamine concentration. Two groups have demonstrated that in response to amphetamine, patients with schizophrenia displace more dopamine D 2 -ligand than healthy subjects (Abi-Dargham et al. 1998;Breier et al. 1997;Laruelle et al. 1996). Additional evidence in support of increased dopamine activity comes from demonstrations of increased metabolism of [ 18 F]fluorodopa (Dao-Castellana et al. 1997;Hietala et al. 1995;Reith et al. 1994) and [ 11 C]L-DOPA (Lindstrom et al. 1999). The prevailing interpretation of these findings is that schizophrenic patients episodically release more dopamine (Breier et al. 1997;Laruelle et al. 1996), possibly in connection with up-regulated enzyme activity of dopa-decarboxylase induced by low tonic activity of dopaminergic neurons (Reith et al. 1994). Given the importance of this data to the pathophysiology of NO . 6 schizophrenia, alternative explanations need to be ruled out. For instance, schizophrenic patients may have greater dopaminergic innervation in the striatum. Regulation of transmitter release, and uptake, could be normal, while greater terminal density could lead to more release of dopamine after re-uptake blockade and vesicular release by amphetamine.Although post-mortem studies have found normal density of presynaptic dopamine markers, such as the dopamine transporter (Hirai et al. 1988;Joyce et al. 1988;Pearce et al. 1990) and expressed mRNA for tyrosine hydroxylase (Ichinose et al. 1994), excessive innervation could be obscured by normal aging and more rapid degeneration of terminals in schizophrenia. Dopamine receptors Volkow et al. 1996b), transporters (Volkow et al. 1996a), and vesicles (Frey et al. 1998 all declin...