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Increased regional cerebral glucose metabolism and semantic memory performance in Alzheimer's disease: A pilot double blind transdermal nicotine positron emission tomography study
Authors:Randolph W Parks PhD  PsyD  Robert E Becker  Robert F Rippey  David G Gilbert  Jane R Matthews  Esperanza Kabatay  Carter S Young  Cathy Vohs  Valerie Danz  Patricia Keim  G Todd Collins  Steven S Zigler  Paul G Urycki
Institution:(1) Departments of Psychiatry and Psychology, Southern Illinois University School of Medicine, 62794-1412 Springfield and Carbondale, Illinois;(2) Departments of Nuclear Medicine and PET Imaging, Downstate Clinical Positron Emission Tomography Center, Methodist Medical Center, Peoria, Illinois;(3) Department of Psychiatry, Southern Illinois University School of Medicine, P. O. Box 19230, 62794-1412 Springfield, Illinois
Abstract:Nicotinic receptor dysfunction and impaired semantic memory occur early in Alzheimer's disease patients (AD). Previous research implied that nicotine's ability to enhance alertness, arousal, and cognition in a number of nonclinical populations was a function of its ability to stimulate CNS nicotinic cholinergic receptors. In this study it was hypothesized that transdermal administration of nicotine would increase both regional cerebral glucose metabolism (rCMRglc) and semantic memory (as assessed by verbal fluency). Two mild AD and two elderly controls underwent positron emission tomography scanning during a double blind nicotinic agonist verbal fluency challenge procedure. rCMRglc increases occurred in both AD patients, but not controls. In the two AD patients, verbal fluency scores increased by an average of 17%. One elderly control's verbal fluency increased, and the other decreased. These findings suggest that nicotine's effect on metabolism and verbal fluency is due to its ability to stimulate the cholinergic system.
Keywords:Alzheimer's disease  transdermal nicotine  positron emission tomography  cholinergic stimulation  semantic memory  verbal fluency
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