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    Br J Psychiatry. 1997 Jan;170:77-81.

    Cerebral perfusion correlates of depressed mood.

    Source

    Medical Research Council Brain Metabolism Unit, Royal Edinburgh Hospital, Edinburgh.

    Abstract

    BACKGROUND:

    The spontaneous diurnal variation of mood and other symptoms provides a substrate for the examination of the relationship between symptoms and regional brain activation in depression.

    METHOD:

    Twenty unipolar depressed patients with diurnal variation of mood were examined at 8 a.m. and 8 p.m. with neuropsychological measures, clinical ratings and single photon emission tomography (SPET). Brain perfusion maps were spatially transformed into standard stereotactic space and compared pixel-by-pixel. A parametric (correlational) analysis was used to examine the relationship between symptom severity and brain perfusion, both between and within subjects.

    RESULTS:

    Global depression severity and an independent 'vital' depression factor were associated in subjects with increased perfusion in cingulate and other paralimbic areas. In addition there was a probable association between an increase in an anxious-depression factor and reduced frontal neocortical perfusion.

    CONCLUSIONS:

    Depressive symptom changes are associated with metabolic changes in the cingulate gyrus and associated paralimbic structures.

    PMID:
    9068780
    [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]

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