Functional neuroanatomy of CCK4-induced anxiety in normal healthy volunteers.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Standard

Functional neuroanatomy of CCK4-induced anxiety in normal healthy volunteers. / Benkelfat, C; Bradwejn, J; Meyer, E; Ellenbogen, M; Milot, S; Gjedde, A; Evans, A.

In: American Journal of Psychiatry, Vol. 152, No. 8, 1995, p. 1180-4.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Benkelfat, C, Bradwejn, J, Meyer, E, Ellenbogen, M, Milot, S, Gjedde, A & Evans, A 1995, 'Functional neuroanatomy of CCK4-induced anxiety in normal healthy volunteers.', American Journal of Psychiatry, vol. 152, no. 8, pp. 1180-4.

APA

Benkelfat, C., Bradwejn, J., Meyer, E., Ellenbogen, M., Milot, S., Gjedde, A., & Evans, A. (1995). Functional neuroanatomy of CCK4-induced anxiety in normal healthy volunteers. American Journal of Psychiatry, 152(8), 1180-4.

Vancouver

Benkelfat C, Bradwejn J, Meyer E, Ellenbogen M, Milot S, Gjedde A et al. Functional neuroanatomy of CCK4-induced anxiety in normal healthy volunteers. American Journal of Psychiatry. 1995;152(8):1180-4.

Author

Benkelfat, C ; Bradwejn, J ; Meyer, E ; Ellenbogen, M ; Milot, S ; Gjedde, A ; Evans, A. / Functional neuroanatomy of CCK4-induced anxiety in normal healthy volunteers. In: American Journal of Psychiatry. 1995 ; Vol. 152, No. 8. pp. 1180-4.

Bibtex

@article{3814b5a0b31511debc73000ea68e967b,
title = "Functional neuroanatomy of CCK4-induced anxiety in normal healthy volunteers.",
abstract = "OBJECTIVE: The authors tested the prediction of temporal cortex activation during experimentally induced anxiety by using positron emission tomography and the [15O]H2O bolus-subtraction method to determine regional cerebral blood flow (CBF) changes in normal volunteers challenged with a bolus injection of cholecystokinin tetrapeptide (CCK4). METHOD: Eight right-handed healthy subjects (five male, three female; mean age, 26.4 years) underwent four 60-second [15O]H2O scans separated by 15-minute intervals; each scan followed an intravenous bolus injection of either saline (placebo) or CCK4 (50 micrograms). Each subject received CCK4 once, as the first or second bolus, in a random-order, placebo-controlled, double-blind fashion. Two of the three placebo conditions were nominally identical, and the remaining placebo was used to control for anticipatory anxiety. Magnetic resonance imaging scans were obtained for subsequent anatomical correlation of blood flow changes. RESULTS: CCK4, but not placebo, elicited a marked anxiogenic response, reflected by robust increases in subjective anxiety ratings and heart rate. CCK4-induced anxiety was associated with 1) robust and bilateral increases in extracerebral blood flow in the vicinity of the superficial temporal artery territory and 2) CBF increases in the anterior cingulate gyrus, the claustrum-insular-amygdala region, and the cerebellar vermis. CONCLUSIONS: Some of the temporopolar cortex CBF activation peaks previously reported in humans in association with drug- and non-drug-induced anxiety, as well as the increase in regional CBF in the claustrum-insular-amygdala region, may be of vascular and/or muscular origin.",
author = "C Benkelfat and J Bradwejn and E Meyer and M Ellenbogen and S Milot and A Gjedde and A Evans",
year = "1995",
language = "English",
volume = "152",
pages = "1180--4",
journal = "The American Journal of Psychiatry",
issn = "0002-953X",
publisher = "American Psychiatric Publishing, Inc.",
number = "8",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Functional neuroanatomy of CCK4-induced anxiety in normal healthy volunteers.

AU - Benkelfat, C

AU - Bradwejn, J

AU - Meyer, E

AU - Ellenbogen, M

AU - Milot, S

AU - Gjedde, A

AU - Evans, A

PY - 1995

Y1 - 1995

N2 - OBJECTIVE: The authors tested the prediction of temporal cortex activation during experimentally induced anxiety by using positron emission tomography and the [15O]H2O bolus-subtraction method to determine regional cerebral blood flow (CBF) changes in normal volunteers challenged with a bolus injection of cholecystokinin tetrapeptide (CCK4). METHOD: Eight right-handed healthy subjects (five male, three female; mean age, 26.4 years) underwent four 60-second [15O]H2O scans separated by 15-minute intervals; each scan followed an intravenous bolus injection of either saline (placebo) or CCK4 (50 micrograms). Each subject received CCK4 once, as the first or second bolus, in a random-order, placebo-controlled, double-blind fashion. Two of the three placebo conditions were nominally identical, and the remaining placebo was used to control for anticipatory anxiety. Magnetic resonance imaging scans were obtained for subsequent anatomical correlation of blood flow changes. RESULTS: CCK4, but not placebo, elicited a marked anxiogenic response, reflected by robust increases in subjective anxiety ratings and heart rate. CCK4-induced anxiety was associated with 1) robust and bilateral increases in extracerebral blood flow in the vicinity of the superficial temporal artery territory and 2) CBF increases in the anterior cingulate gyrus, the claustrum-insular-amygdala region, and the cerebellar vermis. CONCLUSIONS: Some of the temporopolar cortex CBF activation peaks previously reported in humans in association with drug- and non-drug-induced anxiety, as well as the increase in regional CBF in the claustrum-insular-amygdala region, may be of vascular and/or muscular origin.

AB - OBJECTIVE: The authors tested the prediction of temporal cortex activation during experimentally induced anxiety by using positron emission tomography and the [15O]H2O bolus-subtraction method to determine regional cerebral blood flow (CBF) changes in normal volunteers challenged with a bolus injection of cholecystokinin tetrapeptide (CCK4). METHOD: Eight right-handed healthy subjects (five male, three female; mean age, 26.4 years) underwent four 60-second [15O]H2O scans separated by 15-minute intervals; each scan followed an intravenous bolus injection of either saline (placebo) or CCK4 (50 micrograms). Each subject received CCK4 once, as the first or second bolus, in a random-order, placebo-controlled, double-blind fashion. Two of the three placebo conditions were nominally identical, and the remaining placebo was used to control for anticipatory anxiety. Magnetic resonance imaging scans were obtained for subsequent anatomical correlation of blood flow changes. RESULTS: CCK4, but not placebo, elicited a marked anxiogenic response, reflected by robust increases in subjective anxiety ratings and heart rate. CCK4-induced anxiety was associated with 1) robust and bilateral increases in extracerebral blood flow in the vicinity of the superficial temporal artery territory and 2) CBF increases in the anterior cingulate gyrus, the claustrum-insular-amygdala region, and the cerebellar vermis. CONCLUSIONS: Some of the temporopolar cortex CBF activation peaks previously reported in humans in association with drug- and non-drug-induced anxiety, as well as the increase in regional CBF in the claustrum-insular-amygdala region, may be of vascular and/or muscular origin.

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 7625467

VL - 152

SP - 1180

EP - 1184

JO - The American Journal of Psychiatry

JF - The American Journal of Psychiatry

SN - 0002-953X

IS - 8

ER -

ID: 14946252