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What's New:
Brain
activity, including memory-processing, changes in Tourette
Syndrome
St.
Louis, April 5, 2004 — Scientists have known for years
that abnormal activity involving a brain chemical called
dopamine is somehow connected to the movements and vocalizations,
or tics, associated with Tourette syndrome. Now neuroscience
researchers at Washington University School of Medicine
in St. Louis have found brain activity in these patients
is abnormal during memory tasks, as well.
The
researchers also found that giving Tourette syndrome
patients the drug levodopa, which is used to treat abnormal
dopamine activity in conditions such as Parkinson's
disease, normalized brain activity during the memory
tasks.
“We've
observed in the living brain a dopamine-sensitive abnormality
in people with tics. That's been hypothesized for 40
years, but this is the first time it's been demonstrated,”
says principal investigator Kevin J. Black, M.D., assistant
professor of psychiatry, neurology and radiology and
staff physician at Barnes-Jewish Hospital. “We actually
have a direct demonstration of abnormal brain activation
in people with Tourette syndrome that is corrected when
they are given a dopamine-type medicine.”
The
study is published online and will appear in the May
issue of the journal Biological Psychiatry.
Using
functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI), the researchers
compared eight adults with Tourette syndrome to 10 age-
and gender-matched individuals without tics. Brain scans
were taken while participants performed a memory task
that involved remembering and identifying letters on
a computer screen. The task measures working memory,
a type of short-term memory that involves concentration
on several things at once.
“We
chose to look at the brain's response to a working memory
task because past research has shown that working memory
could be affected by dopamine levels in the brain,”
says first author Tamara Hershey, Ph.D., assistant professor
of psychiatry and neurology at the School of Medicine.
“We also know dopamine is involved in tics, but if we
had studied a task that involved movement, for example,
the fact that some tics involve movement could have
made it harder to interpret the differences in brain
activity.”
In
terms of speed and accuracy during the memory task,
there were no differences between the two groups, but
fMRI scans revealed that several brain areas were more
active in Tourette syndrome patients than healthy participants.
The
clearest differences were in a brain region called the
parietal cortex, located at the top of the brain roughly
in between the front and back of the head. Tourette
syndrome patients also had increased activity in the
medial frontal gyrus and in the thalamus — which acts
as the brain's relay station between the outer layer,
or cortex and the rest of the nervous system.
“People
with tics performed this task just as well as people
without, so it's not something that involves a difference
in output,” Black says “Therefore, we believe any differences
we saw in the fMRI scans reflect changes in the way
the brain is working.”
To
determine whether the results were related to dopamine
abnormalities, Hershey, Black and colleagues gave all
participants an intravenous infusion of the drug levodopa.
When
the two groups then repeated the original working memory
task, brain activity in healthy participants was unchanged.
In TS patients, however, the areas that had been abnormally
overactive were substantially less active after treatment.
“Levodopa
seems to normalize the excess activity we had seen in
the parietal cortex in the group with tics,” Hershey
says. “There were changes in activity in the other structures,
too, but the changes in the parietal cortex were the
most dramatic.”
Before
decoding which brain scans belonged to which participants,
Black looked at the patients' medical histories and
used a standard method of rating the severity of their
illness. He found that those with the most severe history
of Tourette syndrome had the largest post-levodopa decreases
in brain activity during the working memory task.
Now
that they know the brain functions differently in people
with Tourette syndrome, Black and Hershey plan to look
at brain activity during different tasks to see whether
they can find more dopamine-related differences.
Black
also is finalizing a treatment study to determine if
levodopa helps control tics in Tourette syndrome patients.
That study should be completed later this year.
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Hershey
T, Black KJ, Hartlein JM, Barch DM, Braver TS, Carl
JL, Perlmutter JS. Cognitive-Pharmacologic Functional
Magnetic Resonance Imaging in Tourette Syndrome: A Pilot
Study. Biological Psychiatry, May 1, 2004.
This
research was supported by a Young Investigator award
from the National Alliance for Research on Schizophrenia
and Depression, by the Greater St. Louis Chapter of
the American Parkinson's Disease Association (ADPA),
the National Institutes of Health, the Parkinson's Disease
Foundation, the Charles A. Dana Foundation and the ADPA
Advanced Center for Parkinson's Disease Research at
Washington University. The Tourette Syndrome Association
provided recruitment support.
The
full-time and volunteer faculty of Washington University
School of Medicine are the physicians and surgeons of
Barnes-Jewish and St. Louis Children's hospitals. The
School of Medicine is one of the leading medical research,
teaching and patient care institutions in the nation,
currently ranked second in the nation by U.S. News &
World Report. Through its affiliations with Barnes-Jewish
and St. Louis Children's hospitals, the School of Medicine
is linked to BJC HealthCare.
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