2015
Imaging the Cannabinoid CB1 Receptor in Humans with [11C] OMAR: Assessment of Kinetic Analysis Methods, Test–Retest Reproducibility, and Gender Differences
Normandin MD, Zheng MQ, Lin KS, Mason NS, Lin SF, Ropchan J, Labaree D, Henry S, Williams WA, Carson RE, Neumeister A, Huang Y. Imaging the Cannabinoid CB1 Receptor in Humans with [11C] OMAR: Assessment of Kinetic Analysis Methods, Test–Retest Reproducibility, and Gender Differences. Cerebrovascular And Brain Metabolism Reviews 2015, 35: 1313-1322. PMID: 25833345, PMCID: PMC4528005, DOI: 10.1038/jcbfm.2015.46.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchConceptsTest-retest reliabilityCannabinoid type 1 receptorType 1 receptorCannabinoid CB1 receptorsPositron emission tomography (PET) imagingTest-retest reproducibilityEmission Tomography ImagingGender differencesTwo-tissue compartment modelCerebral uptakePresent studyCB1 receptorsCB1R availabilityInjected doseVascular componentBody weightReceptor availabilityNeuropsychiatric disordersMultilinear analysis methodRegional volumesReceptor bindingTomography imagingParent fractionOne-tissueHuman subjects
2012
In Vivo Imaging of Endogenous Pancreatic β-Cell Mass in Healthy and Type 1 Diabetic Subjects Using 18F-Fluoropropyl-Dihydrotetrabenazine and PET
Normandin MD, Petersen KF, Ding YS, Lin SF, Naik S, Fowles K, Skovronsky DM, Herold KC, McCarthy TJ, Calle RA, Carson RE, Treadway JL, Cline GW. In Vivo Imaging of Endogenous Pancreatic β-Cell Mass in Healthy and Type 1 Diabetic Subjects Using 18F-Fluoropropyl-Dihydrotetrabenazine and PET. Journal Of Nuclear Medicine 2012, 53: 908-916. PMID: 22573821, PMCID: PMC3737743, DOI: 10.2967/jnumed.111.100545.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchConceptsType 1 diabetes mellitusVesicular monoamine transporter type 2Pancreatic β-cell massStandardized uptake valueΒ-cell massDiabetes mellitusUptake valueType 1 diabetic subjectsΒ-cell densityHealthy control subjectsInsulin secretion capacityΒ-cell functionPathophysiology of diabetesTransporter type 2Nondisplaceable uptakeDiabetic subjectsControl subjectsDisease progressionClinical assessmentVMAT2 bindingRenal cortexTotal pancreasDTBZ PETEarly diagnosisInjected dose
2011
Striatal dopamine transporter availability in unmedicated bipolar disorder
Anand A, Barkay G, Dzemidzic M, Albrecht D, Karne H, Zheng Q, Hutchins G, Normandin M, Yoder K. Striatal dopamine transporter availability in unmedicated bipolar disorder. Bipolar Disorders 2011, 13: 406-413. PMID: 21843280, DOI: 10.1111/j.1399-5618.2011.00936.x.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchConceptsDopamine transporter availabilityBipolar disorderDopamine transporterPositron emission tomographyNeuropathology of bipolar disorderStriatal dopamine transporter availabilityEtiology of bipolar disorderMultilinear reference tissue modelUnmedicated BPD patientsBilateral dorsal caudatePresynaptic dopamine functionStructural magnetic resonance imagingStriatal binding potentialReceptor imaging studiesReference tissue modelMagnetic resonance imagingBPD patientsDopamine functionDopamine neurotransmissionDopamine systemDorsal caudateSynaptic dopamineBPD subjectsDopaminergic systemDepressive phase