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A postmortem study of frontal cortical dopamine D1 receptors in schizophrenics, psychiatric controls, and normal controls
Authors:MB Knable  TM Hyde  AM Murray  MM Herman  JE Kleinman
Affiliation:National Institute of Mental Health, Intramural Research Program, Washington, DC 20032, USA.
Abstract:We tested the hypothesis that aberrant dopaminergic innervation in frontal and cingulate cortices of schizophrenic patients might be revealed by examining dopamine D1 receptor density in these brain regions. A quantitative autoradiographic assay with 3H]-SCH 23390 was performed with samples from schizophrenic patients, normal controls, neuroleptic-treated controls, and suicides. There was a significant elevation in specific binding of 3H]-SCH 23390 in the intermediate layer of the prefrontal cortex from neuroleptic-treated controls (p = .05). Elevated 3H]-SCH 23390 binding in several layers from prefrontal and cingulate cortex was observed in schizophrenic subjects, although these results did not reach statistical significance. When data from subjects who had received neuroleptics (schizophrenics and neuroleptic controls) were compared to subjects who had not received neuroleptics (normal controls and suicides), there was a significant elevation in receptor density in both the prefrontal (p = .05) and cingulate cortices (p = .03). These data suggest that elevated 3H]-SCH 23390 binding in human prefrontal and cingulate cortices may occur with chronic neuroleptic treatment, although increased receptor density that may exist as a feature of psychotic illnesses cannot be excluded.
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