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Fluvoxamine treatment and D(2) receptors: a PET study on OCD drug-naive patients

Academic Article
Publication Date:
2007
abstract:
Changes in D2 receptors during antidepressant therapy have been reported in patients with major depressive disorder using PET/SPET. The aim of this study was to evaluate modifications in D2 receptors that might occur in patients affected by obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD) during serotonin reuptake sites inhibitors (SSRIs). To this purpose, we measured the in vivo binding of [11C]raclopride ([11C]Rac)in the brain of a group of OCD naïve patients before and after the repeated administration of the inhibitor SSRI fluvoxamine. Eight patients with a Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders IVth edition diagnosis of OCD completed the study undergoing a PET scan and a complete clinical evaluation before and during treatment with fluvoxamine. Patients have been compared also with a group of nine age-matched normal volunteers. Fluvoxamine treatment significantly improved clinical symptoms and increased [11C]Rac binding potential (BP) in the basal ganglia of OCD patients (7.55.2, 6.96.9, and 9.99.3% in dorsal caudate, dorsal putamen, and ventral basal ganglia, respectively; p<0.01) to values closer to those observed in the group of normal subjects. Chronic treatment with fluvoxamine induces a slight but significant increase in striatal [11C]Rac BP of previously drug-naïve OCD patients. The modifications in D2 receptor availability might be secondary to fluvoxamine effects on serotoninergic activity.
Iris type:
01.01 Articolo in rivista
Keywords:
Emission tomography; Obsessive-compulsive disorder; Dopamine receptor; antidepressant; Molecular imaging; Drug na1ve
List of contributors:
Moresco, ROSA MARIA; Fazio, Ferruccio; Perani, Daniela; Bonaldi, Lorena; Carpinelli, Assunta
Authors of the University:
BONALDI LORENA
Handle:
https://iris.cnr.it/handle/20.500.14243/167091
Published in:
NEUROPSYCHOPHARMACOLOGY (N.Y. N.Y.)
Journal
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