WO2007024845A2 - Method and system for diagnosis of alcoholism - Google Patents

Method and system for diagnosis of alcoholism Download PDF

Info

Publication number
WO2007024845A2
WO2007024845A2 PCT/US2006/032749 US2006032749W WO2007024845A2 WO 2007024845 A2 WO2007024845 A2 WO 2007024845A2 US 2006032749 W US2006032749 W US 2006032749W WO 2007024845 A2 WO2007024845 A2 WO 2007024845A2
Authority
WO
WIPO (PCT)
Prior art keywords
human
brain
alcar
subjects
membrane
Prior art date
Application number
PCT/US2006/032749
Other languages
French (fr)
Other versions
WO2007024845A3 (en
Inventor
Jay W. Pettegrew
Kanagasaba Panchalingam
Original Assignee
Pettegrew Jay W
Kanagasaba Panchalingam
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Application filed by Pettegrew Jay W, Kanagasaba Panchalingam filed Critical Pettegrew Jay W
Publication of WO2007024845A2 publication Critical patent/WO2007024845A2/en
Publication of WO2007024845A3 publication Critical patent/WO2007024845A3/en

Links

Classifications

    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A61MEDICAL OR VETERINARY SCIENCE; HYGIENE
    • A61BDIAGNOSIS; SURGERY; IDENTIFICATION
    • A61B5/00Measuring for diagnostic purposes; Identification of persons
    • A61B5/05Detecting, measuring or recording for diagnosis by means of electric currents or magnetic fields; Measuring using microwaves or radio waves 
    • A61B5/055Detecting, measuring or recording for diagnosis by means of electric currents or magnetic fields; Measuring using microwaves or radio waves  involving electronic [EMR] or nuclear [NMR] magnetic resonance, e.g. magnetic resonance imaging
    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A23FOODS OR FOODSTUFFS; TREATMENT THEREOF, NOT COVERED BY OTHER CLASSES
    • A23LFOODS, FOODSTUFFS, OR NON-ALCOHOLIC BEVERAGES, NOT COVERED BY SUBCLASSES A21D OR A23B-A23J; THEIR PREPARATION OR TREATMENT, e.g. COOKING, MODIFICATION OF NUTRITIVE QUALITIES, PHYSICAL TREATMENT; PRESERVATION OF FOODS OR FOODSTUFFS, IN GENERAL
    • A23L33/00Modifying nutritive qualities of foods; Dietetic products; Preparation or treatment thereof
    • A23L33/10Modifying nutritive qualities of foods; Dietetic products; Preparation or treatment thereof using additives
    • A23L33/17Amino acids, peptides or proteins
    • A23L33/175Amino acids
    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A61MEDICAL OR VETERINARY SCIENCE; HYGIENE
    • A61BDIAGNOSIS; SURGERY; IDENTIFICATION
    • A61B5/00Measuring for diagnostic purposes; Identification of persons
    • A61B5/40Detecting, measuring or recording for evaluating the nervous system
    • A61B5/4058Detecting, measuring or recording for evaluating the nervous system for evaluating the central nervous system
    • A61B5/4064Evaluating the brain
    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A61MEDICAL OR VETERINARY SCIENCE; HYGIENE
    • A61BDIAGNOSIS; SURGERY; IDENTIFICATION
    • A61B6/00Apparatus for radiation diagnosis, e.g. combined with radiation therapy equipment
    • A61B6/50Clinical applications
    • A61B6/501Clinical applications involving diagnosis of head, e.g. neuroimaging, craniography
    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A61MEDICAL OR VETERINARY SCIENCE; HYGIENE
    • A61KPREPARATIONS FOR MEDICAL, DENTAL OR TOILETRY PURPOSES
    • A61K31/00Medicinal preparations containing organic active ingredients
    • A61K31/21Esters, e.g. nitroglycerine, selenocyanates
    • A61K31/215Esters, e.g. nitroglycerine, selenocyanates of carboxylic acids
    • A61K31/22Esters, e.g. nitroglycerine, selenocyanates of carboxylic acids of acyclic acids, e.g. pravastatin
    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A61MEDICAL OR VETERINARY SCIENCE; HYGIENE
    • A61KPREPARATIONS FOR MEDICAL, DENTAL OR TOILETRY PURPOSES
    • A61K36/00Medicinal preparations of undetermined constitution containing material from algae, lichens, fungi or plants, or derivatives thereof, e.g. traditional herbal medicines
    • A61K36/18Magnoliophyta (angiosperms)
    • A61K36/185Magnoliopsida (dicotyledons)
    • A61K36/28Asteraceae or Compositae (Aster or Sunflower family), e.g. chamomile, feverfew, yarrow or echinacea
    • GPHYSICS
    • G01MEASURING; TESTING
    • G01RMEASURING ELECTRIC VARIABLES; MEASURING MAGNETIC VARIABLES
    • G01R33/00Arrangements or instruments for measuring magnetic variables
    • G01R33/20Arrangements or instruments for measuring magnetic variables involving magnetic resonance
    • G01R33/44Arrangements or instruments for measuring magnetic variables involving magnetic resonance using nuclear magnetic resonance [NMR]
    • G01R33/48NMR imaging systems
    • G01R33/483NMR imaging systems with selection of signals or spectra from particular regions of the volume, e.g. in vivo spectroscopy
    • G01R33/485NMR imaging systems with selection of signals or spectra from particular regions of the volume, e.g. in vivo spectroscopy based on chemical shift information [CSI] or spectroscopic imaging, e.g. to acquire the spatial distributions of metabolites
    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A23FOODS OR FOODSTUFFS; TREATMENT THEREOF, NOT COVERED BY OTHER CLASSES
    • A23VINDEXING SCHEME RELATING TO FOODS, FOODSTUFFS OR NON-ALCOHOLIC BEVERAGES AND LACTIC OR PROPIONIC ACID BACTERIA USED IN FOODSTUFFS OR FOOD PREPARATION
    • A23V2002/00Food compositions, function of food ingredients or processes for food or foodstuffs
    • GPHYSICS
    • G01MEASURING; TESTING
    • G01NINVESTIGATING OR ANALYSING MATERIALS BY DETERMINING THEIR CHEMICAL OR PHYSICAL PROPERTIES
    • G01N2800/00Detection or diagnosis of diseases
    • G01N2800/30Psychoses; Psychiatry
    • G01N2800/307Drug dependency, e.g. alcoholism

Definitions

  • the present invention relates to methods adapted for diagnosis of the progression of neuropsychiatric disorders, specifically chronic alcoholism disease.
  • AACAR acetyl-L-carnitine
  • Depressive disorders i.e., major depression, dysthymia, bipolar disorder
  • Depressive disorders are among the most common and disabling medical conditions throughout the world. For example, about 9.5% of the US adult population will suffer from a form of depression during any given year which is approximately 18.8 million people. In addition, 16-18% of women and 10% of men (3-4 million) will experience some form of depression. The lifetime risk for depression is approximately 15-20% regardless of gender.
  • Bipolar depressive episodes usually last longer, have a greater likelihood of psychotic features, and convey a greater risk of suicide.
  • Bipolar disorder may be misdiagnosed as depression resulting in inappropriate treatment that may worsen the disease progression and outcome.
  • Depression is a acotraveler with a number of other medical and psychiatric conditions and numerous medications can cause depressive symptoms.
  • the prevailing dogma concerning the pathophysiology of depressive disorders is that of an altered neurotransmitter receptor and many studies have been conducted to find such an alteration. To date, there has been no demonstration of an alteration in the binding site for any of the targeted neurotransmitters.
  • Another problem with the altered neurotransmitters receptor dogma is that although the tricyclic antidepressants and selective neurotransmitter reuptake inhibitor drugs quickly enter brain and bind to their targeted sites, the clinical therapeutic effect does not occur for 4-6 weeks even though the onset of side effects is immediate.
  • BPII bipolar II
  • ALCAR' s antidepressant activity may indeed provide a unique opportunity to address the above-described concerns. Since ALCAR is a natural substance and has been shown to have antidepressant properties without significant side effects and without the potential to induce mania, it is a logical new therapeutic approach.
  • ALCAR has been shown to have beneficial effects on age-related neurodegenernation and brain energetic stress providing a rationale for its use in Major Depressive Disorder (MDD).
  • MDD Major Depressive Disorder
  • ALCAR has demonstrated antidepressant activity in MDD subjects without significant side effects (Villardita et al, 1983; Tempesta et al, 1987; Nasca et al, 1989; Bella et al, 1990; Fulgente et al, 1990; Garzya et al, 1990).
  • MDD has been shown to be associated with changes in: (1) neurotransmitter systems such as serotonin, acetylcholine, and noradrenergic; (2) membranes (e.g., composition, metabolism, biophysical parameters, signal transduction, and ion transport); (3) brain energy metabolism; and (4) brain structure.
  • Computed tomography (CT) and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) studies in subjects with non-demented, geriatric, major depressive disorder suggest neurodegenerative changes are associated with vascular risk factors (Krishnan, 1993). Beyond brain structural changes, there is evidence from functional neuroimaging studies for molecular, metabolic, and physiologic brain changes suggestive of energetic stress in subjects with MDD.
  • Positron emission tomography (PET) and single photon emission computed tomography (SPECT) studies show a reduced fluorodeoxyglucose metabolic rate (rCMRg) (Buchsbaum et al, 1986) and reduced regional cerebral blood flow (rCBF) (Schlegel et al, 1989) in the basal ganglia and a decrease in rCMRg and rCBF in the frontal lobes of subjects with MDD (Mayberg et al, 1994).
  • rCMRg fluorodeoxyglucose metabolic rate
  • rCBF regional cerebral blood flow
  • 31 P and 1 H magnetic resonance spectroscopic imaging ( 31 P- 1 H MRSI) studies provide direct information on membrane phospholipid and high-energy phosphate metabolism ( 31 P MRSI) as well as a marker for neuronal structural and metabolic integrity ( 1 H MRSI).
  • 31 P and 1 H MRS studies of subjects with MDD indicate alterations in high-energy phosphate and membrane phospholipid metabolism in basal ganglia and prefrontal cortex (Moore et al, 1991 ⁇ ; Charles et al, 1994; Pettegrew et al 2002).
  • MRI studies provide neuromorphometric correlates of MDD (reviewed by Botteron & Figiel, 1997).
  • MRI studies of third ventricle size in major depression give mixed results; Coffey et al. (1993) report no difference in ventricle size and Rabins et al. (1991) report increased third ventricle size in subjects with MDD compared with controls.
  • Brain MRI subcortical white matter hyperintensities have been reported in the basal ganglia, periventricular region, and frontal lobe of elderly depressed (Coffey et al, 1988; Figiel et al, 1989; Rabins et al, 1991).
  • ALCAR affected free fatty acid metabolism by increasing the reservoir of activated acyl groups involved in the reacylation of membrane phospholipids (Blokland et at, 1993).
  • ALCAR eliminated the reperfusion elevation of brain protein carbonyl groups which reflect free radical-induced protein oxidation (Liu et at, 1993).
  • ALCAR In a rat streptozotocin-induced model of brain hypoglycemia, ALCAR attenuated both the streptozotocin-induced impairment in spatial discrimination learning and decrease in hippocampal choline acetyltransferase activity (Prickaerts et al, 1995). A deficiency in ALCAR has been shown to be a cause for altered nerve myo-inositol content, Na -K -ATPase activity, and motor conduction velocity in the streptozotocin-diabetic rat (Stevens et at, 1996).
  • sparse-fur mice have a deficiency of hepatic ornithine transcarbamylase resulting in congenital hyperammonemic with elevated cerebral ammonia and glutamine and reduced cerebral cytochrome oxidase activity and a reduction in cerebral high-energy phosphate levels.
  • ALCAR treatment increased cytochrome oxidase subunit I mRNA, and restored both cytochrome oxidase activity and the levels of high-energy phosphates (Rao et at, 1997).
  • Our studies of hypoxia in Fischer 344 rats demonstrate ALCAR' s beneficial effect on brain membrane phospholipid and high- energy phosphate metabolism (Pettegrew et at, unpublished results.
  • ALCAR has been shown to effect membrane structure and function in a number of different systems.
  • ALCAR administration affects the inner mitochondrial membrane protein composition in rat cerebellum (Villa et at, 1988), increases human erythrocyte membrane stability possibly by interacting with cytoskeletal proteins (Arduini et at, 1990), increases human erythrocyte cytoskeletal protein- protein interactions (Butterfield & Rangachari, 1993), and alters the membrane dynamics of human erythrocytes in the region of the glycerol backbone of membrane phospholipid bilayers (Arduini et al, 1993).
  • ALCAR enhances the ⁇ neurotrophic activity of nerve growth factor (NGF).
  • NGF nerve growth factor
  • ALCAR increases NGF binding in aged rat hippocampus and basal forebrain (Angelucci et al, 1988), increases NGF receptor expression in rat striatum, and increases choline acetyltranferase activity in the same area (De Simone R.
  • ALCAR has some cholinergic activity (Fritz, 1963; Tempesta et al , 1985), possibly because it shares conformational properties with acetylcholine (Sass & Werness, 1973). This is interesting as acetylcholine may play an important role in the chronobiological organization of the human body (Morley & Murrin, 1989; Wee & Turek, 1989), mediating also some effects of light on the circadian clock (Wee & Turek, 1989).
  • Acetylcholine is implicated in the regulation of the hypothalamic- pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis (Mueller et al, 1977; Risch et al, 1981) and cholinomimetics are effective on the HPA axis (Janowsky et al, 1981; Risch et al, 1981).
  • HPA hypothalamic- pituitary-adrenal
  • cholinomimetics are effective on the HPA axis (Janowsky et al, 1981; Risch et al, 1981).
  • ALCAR also seems to interfere with the serotonergic system (Tempesta et al, 1982; 1985).
  • Serotonin plays an important role in the regulation of circadian rhythms (Kordon et al, 1981; Leibiwitz et al, 1989) and there is consistent evidence that it affects Cortisol secretion (Imura et al, 1973; Krieger, 1978; Meltzer et al, 1982).
  • ALCAR has been demonstrated to reverse aging-related changes in brain ultrastructure, neurotransmitter systems, membrane receptors, mitochondrial proteins, membrane structure and metabolism, memory, and behavior.
  • ALCAR restores the number of axosomatic and giant bouton vesicles in aged rat hippocampus (Badiali et al, 1987), reduces aging-related lipofuscin accumulation in prefrontal pyramidal neurons and hippocampal CA3 neurons in rats (Kohjimoto et al, 1988; Amenta et al, 1989), and reduces aging-related changes in the rat hippocampal mossy fiber system (Ricci et al, 1989).
  • ALCAR reduces the age-dependent loss of glucocorticoid receptors in rat hippocampus (Ricci et al, 1989), attenuates the age- dependent decrease in NMDA receptors in rat hippocampus (Fiore & Rampello, 1989; Castorina et al, 1993; 1994; Piovesan et al, 1994; and reviewed by Castorina & Ferraris, 1988), and reduces age-related changes in the dopaminergic system of aging mouse brain (Sershen et al, 1991). Age-related changes in mitochondria also are reduced by ALCAR.
  • ALCAR increases cytochrome oxidase activity in rat cerebral cortex, hippocampus, and striatum (Curti et al, 1989), restores to normal reduced transcripts of mitochondrial DNA in rat brain and heart but not liver (Gadaleta et al, 1990), increases cytochrome oxidase activity of synaptic and non- synaptic mitochondria (Villa & Gorini, 1991), reverses age-related reduction in the phosphate carrier and cardiolipin levels in heart mitochondria (Paradies et al, 1992), reverses age-related reduction in cytochrome oxidase and adenine nucleotide transferase activity in rat heart by modifying age-related changes in mitochondrial cardiolipin levels (Paradies et al, 1994; 1995), and reverses age-related alteration in the protein composition of the inner mitochondrial membrane (Villa et al, 1988).
  • ALCAR also increases synaptosomal high-affinity choline uptake in the cerebral cortex of aging rats (Curti et al, 1989; Piovesan et al, 1994), increases choline acetyltransferase activity in aged rat striatum (De Simone R.
  • ALCAR increases NGF receptor expression in rat striatum (De Simone R.
  • ALCAR has been shown in aged rats to modulate synaptic structural dynamics (Bertoni-Freddari et al, 1994) and improve measures of behavior (Angelucci, 1988; Kohjimoto et al, 1988) as well as memory (Barnes et al, 1990; Caprioli et al, 1990; 1995).
  • ALCAR has been reported to normalize the pituitary-adrenocortical hyperactivity in pathological brain aging (Nappi et al, 1988; Ghirardi et al, 1994).
  • ALCAR improves standardized clinical measures and measures of membrane phospholipid and high-energy phosphate metabolism in subjects with Alzheimer' s disease (AD) measured by in vivo 31 P MRS (Pettegrew et al, 1995).
  • AD Alzheimer' s disease
  • ALCAR has been shown to have significant antidepressant activity in geriatric depressed subjects with minimal or no side effects (Villardita et al, 1983; Tempesta et al, 1987; Nasca et al, 1989; Bella et al, 1990; Fulgente et al, 1990; Garzya et al, 1990; Gecele et al, 1991).
  • Villardita et al (1983) reported a double-blind ALCAR/placebo study of 28 subjects (18 males, 10 females; 72.3V7.3 years).
  • Nasca et al (1989) demonstrated a significant improvement in the HDRS scores of ALCAR treated subjects at day 40 of treatment (p ⁇ 0.001). There was no improvement in the placebo treated group. Similar significant beneficial effects of ALCAR on the HDRS were observed in randomized, double-blind, ALCAR/placebo studies of Garzya et al.
  • AACAR acetyl-L-carnitine
  • Chronic alcoholism is a diverse and heterogeneous disorder that can be dichotomized into cognitively intact and cognitively impaired subgroups.
  • ethanol has been shown to have both acute and chronic effects on: Membrane biophysical properties, Membrane composition and metabolism, Protein phosphorylation, Lipid metabolic signaling, Lipoprotein transport of cholesterol.
  • Aureli T Miccheli A, Ricciolini R, Di Cocco ME, Ramacci MT,
  • Benazzi F (1997) Antidepressant-associated hypomania in outpatient depression: a 203-case study in private practice. J. Affective Disord. 46, 73-77.
  • Blazer DG Hughes DC & George LK. The epidemiology of depression in an elderly community population. Gerontologist 27:281-287, 1987.
  • Botteron KN & Figiel GS The neuromorphometry of affective disorders. In: Brain Imaging in Clinical Psychiatry, edited by KRR Krishnan & PM Doraiswamy. New York: Marcel Dekkerjnc, 1997, p. 145-184.
  • Bowers MB Lumbar CSF 5-hydroxyindoleacetic acid and homovanillic acid in affective syndromes. JNervMentDis 158:325-330, 1974.
  • Burnell EE Cullis PR & de Kruij ff B . Effects of tumbling and lateral diffusion on phosphatidylcholine model membrane 31 P-NMR lineshapes. Biochim Biophys Acta 603:63-69, 1980.
  • Caprioli A Markowska AL & Olton DS.
  • Acetyl-L-Carnitine chronic treatment improves spatial acquisition in a new environment in aged rats. J Gerontology Series A, Biological Sciences & Medical Sciences 50:B232-B236, 1995.
  • Angelucci L A cluster analysis study of acetyl-L-carnitine effect on NMDA receptors in aging. Exp Gerontol 28:537-548, 1993.
  • Kupfer DJ Temporal profiles of the course of depression during treatment: Predictors of pathways toward recovery in the elderly. Arch Gen Psychiatry 54:1016-1024, 1997.
  • Figiel GS Coffey CE & Weiner RD. Brain magnetic resonance imaging in elderly depressed patients receiving electroconvulsive therapy. Convulsive Ther 5:26-34, 1989.
  • Kanfer JN Pettegrew JW
  • Moossy J and McCartney DG (1993) Alterations of selected enzymes of phospholipid metabolism in Alzheimer's disease brain tissue as compared to non-Alzheimer's disease controls. Neurochem. Res. 18, 331-334.
  • Manfridi A Forloni GL, Arrigoni-Martelli E & Mancia M. Culture of dorsal root ganglion neurons from aged rats: effects of acetyl-L-carnitine and NGF. Int J Develop Neurosci 10:321-329, 1992.
  • Alzheimer's disease Depiction of increased cerebral myo-inositol with proton MR spectroscopy. Radiology 187:433-437, 1993.
  • Morley BJ & Murrin LC AF64 depletes hypothalamic high affinity choline uptake and disrupts the circadian rhythm of locomotor activity without altering the density of nicotinic acetylcholine receptors. Brain Res 504:238-246, 1989.
  • Mueller EE Nistico G & Scapagnini U. Brain neurotransmitters and the regulation of anterior pituitary function. In: Neuroti-ansmitters and Anterior Pituitary Function, edited by EE Mueller, G Nistico & U Scapagnini. New York: Academic Press, 1977.
  • Phosphorus-31 NMR of neuroblastoma clonal lines effect of cell confluency state and dibutyryl cyclic AMP. Neurochem. Res. 4, 795-801.
  • Acetyl-L-carnitine treatment increases choline acetyltransferase activity and NGF levels in the CNS of adult rats following total fimbria-fornix transection. Brain Res 633:77-82, 1994.
  • Acetyl-L-carnitine restores choline acetyltransferase activity in the hippocampus of rats with partial unilateral fimbria-fornix transection.
  • Seymour AB & Birmaher AB Quantitative morphology of the corpus callosum in pediatric obsessive compulsive disorder. Prog Neuropsychopharmacology Biol Psychiatry, in press, 1997.
  • Singh I Xu C, Pettegrew JW and Kanfer JN (1994) Endogenous inhibitors of human choline acetyltransferase present in Alzheimer's brain: Preliminary observation. Neurobiol. Aging 15, 643-649.
  • Acetyl-L-carnitine enhances the response of PC 12 cells to nerve growth factor. Brain Res Develop Brain Res 59:221-230, 1991.
  • Acetyl-L-carnitine treatment increases nerve growth factor levels and choline acetyltransferase activity in the central nervous system of aged rats. Exp Gerontol 29:55-66, 1994.
  • Urenjak J Williams SR, Gadian DG & Noble M. Specific expression of N-acetylaspartate in neurons, oligodendrocyte-type-2 astrocyte progenitors, and immature oligodendrocytes in vitro. JNeurochem 59:55-61, 1992.
  • Vance DE Phospholipid metabolism and cell signalling in eucaryotes.
  • ALCAR acetyl-L-carnitine
  • the method allows cognitive impairment seen in some chronic alcoholism subjects to be determined.
  • Regional molecular/metabolic alterations of phospholipid and ganglioside metabolism are determined which distinguish cognitively impaired and cognitively unimpaired chronic alcoholism subjects.
  • FIG. IA is a graph showing the correlation of PCr levels from the prefrontal region with HDRS scores for both depressed patients (• subject #1; ⁇ subject #2);
  • FIG. IB is a graph showing the correlation of PME(s- ⁇ c ) levels from the prefrontal region with HDRS scores for both depressed patients (• subject #1; ⁇ subject #2);
  • the control values include mean+SD;
  • the control values include mean+SD;
  • FIG. 3A is a phosphorous magnetic resonance spectroscopic image showing the Z-scores of the two depressed subjects compared with controls at entry and 12 weeks for PME(s- ⁇ c ) metabolite levels for those regions with significant differences.
  • the intensity of the color is scaled to the z-score (mean difference/SD) given on the scale below the image.
  • Z-scores for PME(s- ⁇ c ) and PCr levels in the frontal region exceed 3.0 and 2.0, respectively;
  • FIG. 3B is a phosphorous magnetic resonance spectroscopic image showing the Z-scores of the two depressed subjects compared with controls at entry and 12 weeks for PCr metabolite levels for those regions with significant differences.
  • the intensity of the color is scaled to the z-score (mean difference/SD) given on the scale below the image.
  • Z-scores for PME(s- ⁇ c ) and PCr levels in the frontal region exceed 2.0 and 2.0, respectively;
  • FIG. 4 is a block diagram illustrating an effect of ALCAR on in vitro 31 P MRS ⁇ -GP and PCr levels under hypoxic (30 seconds) and normoxic conditions in Fischer 344 rats;
  • FIG. 5 is a block diagram illustrating an effect of ALCAR on in vitro 31 P MRS phospholipid levels under hypoxic and normoxic conditions in Fischer 344 rats;
  • FIG. 6 is a block diagram illustrating a percent change of in vivo 31 P MRSI metabolite levels and PME, PDE linewidths [full width at half maximum (fwhm)] of 2 MDD subjects compared with 13 control subjects;
  • FIG. 7 is a flow diagram illustrating a method for diagnosing chronic alcoholism in a human
  • FIG. 10 is flow diagram illustrating a Method 46 for diagnosing chronic alcoholism in a human
  • Carnitines in general are compounds of including the chemical formula (1):
  • R is hydrogen or an alkanoyl group with 2 to 8 carbon atoms
  • X " represents the anion of a pharmaceutically acceptable salt
  • the invention described herein includes both the administration of L- carnitine or an alkanoyl L-carnitine or one of its pharmacologically acceptable salts of formula (1) in the treatment of depression, and pharmaceutical compositions, which can be administered orally, parenterally or nasally, including controlled-release forms.
  • the alkanoyl L-carnitine is selected from the group consisting of acetyl-L- carnitine (hereinafter abbreviated to ALC or ALCAR), propionyl L-carnitine (hereinafter abbreviated to PLC), butyryl L-carnitine, valeryl L-carnitine and isovaleryl L-carnitine, or one of their pharmacologically acceptable salts.
  • ALC or ALCAR acetyl-L- carnitine
  • PLC propionyl L-carnitine
  • butyryl L-carnitine valeryl L-carnitine and isovaleryl L-carnitine, or one of their pharmac
  • a pharmacologically acceptable salt alkanoyl L-carnitine is any salt of the latter with an acid that does not give rise to toxic or side effects. These acids are well known to pharmacologists and to experts in pharmaceutical technology.
  • Examples of pharmacologically acceptable salts of L-carnitine or of the alkanoyl L-carnitines are chloride; bromide; iodide; aspartate; acid aspartate; citrate; acid citrate; tartrate; acid tartrate; phosphate; acid phosphate; fumarate; acid fumarate; glycerophosphate; glucose phosphate; lactate; maleate; acid maleate; mucate; orotate, oxalate; acid oxalate; sulphate; acid sulphate; trichloroacetate; trifluoroacetate; methane sulphonate; pamoate and acid pamoate.
  • a geriatric subject is an individual sixty-five years of age or older. See The Merck Manual, 15 th edition (1987) p. 2389. A non-geriatric subject is less than sixty-five years old but not an adolescent.
  • Adolescence is the transitional stage of development between childhood and full adulthood, representing the period of time during which a person is biologically adult but emotionally may not at full maturity.
  • the ages which are considered to be part of adolescence vary by culture. In the United States, adolescence is generally considered to begin around age thirteen, and end around twenty-four.
  • WHO World Health Organization
  • adolescence defines adolescence as the period of life between around age ten and end around age twenty years of age.
  • an adolescent subject is at least ten years old and less than twenty-six years old.
  • Phosphorus magnetic resonance spectroscopic imaging ( 31 P MRSI) analysis of two depressed elderly subjects treated with ALCAR for 12 weeks are compared with those of six normal non-demented, non-depressed subjects.
  • the two elderly depressed subjects completed baseline Structural Clinical Interview of DSM-IV (SCID) I/P version 2.0, HDRS (17 item), MMSE, UKU Side Effect Rating Scale (UKU), and Cumulative Illness Rating Scale (CIRS) to assess medical burden, baseline physical, ECG, and, laboratory tests for hematology, urine analysis, immunopathology, and blood chemistry.
  • SCID Structural Clinical Interview of DSM-IV
  • HDRS 17 item
  • MMSE UKU Side Effect Rating Scale
  • UNU Cumulative Illness Rating Scale
  • CIRS Cumulative Illness Rating Scale
  • Acetyl-L-carnitine was administered in the form of oral tablets containing 590 mg of acetyl-L-carnitine hydrochloride (500 mg acetyl-L-carnitine). The dosage regimen was fixed at three grams of acetyl-L-carnitine given two tablets three times a day for 12 weeks.
  • 31 P MRSI acquisition A custom built, doubly tuned transmit/receive volume head coil was used to acquire the 1 H MRI and 2D 31 P MRSI data on a GE Signa 1.5 T whole body MR imager. First, sets of axial and sagittal scout MR images were collected. The 30 mm thick MRSI slice was positioned parallel with the anterior commisure-posterior commisure line to include the right and left prefrontal, basal ganglia, superior temporal, inferior parietal, occipital, and centrum semiovale regions.
  • 31 P MRSI 360 mm field of view, 30 mm slice thickness, 8x8 phase encoding steps [45x45x30 mm 3 nominal voxel dimensions], 2 s TR, 1024 data points, 4.0 kHz spectral bandwidth and 16 NEX).
  • MRSI post-processing and quantification To optimize the right and left voxel positions for the six regions, the 8x8 31 P grid was shifted with respect to the anatomical MRI and a mild spatial apodization (i.e., Fermi window with 90% diameter and 5% transition width) was applied prior to the inverse Fourier transform. The remaining processing steps were 100% automated.
  • a mild spatial apodization i.e., Fermi window with 90% diameter and 5% transition width
  • the PME(s- ⁇ c ) i.e., phosphoethanolamine, phosphocholine, and inositol- 1 -phosphate
  • the PME(s- ⁇ c ) are predominantly building blocks of phospholipids and therefore, the relative concentrations of these metabolites are a measure of the active synthesis of membranes;
  • the PDE(s- ⁇ c ) i.e., glycerophosphocholine and glycerophosphoethanolamine
  • PME(i- ⁇ c ) moieties include less mobile molecules such as phosphorylated proteins and PMEs that are tightly coupled (in terms of MRS) to macromolecules [i.e., PMEs inserting into membrane phospholipids.
  • PDE(i- ⁇ c ) moieties include less mobile PDEs that are part of small membrane phospholipid structures such as micelles, synaptic vesicles, and transport/secretory vesicles and PDE moieties coupled to larger molecular structures (i.e., PDEs inserting into membrane phospholipid structures.
  • the right/left side effect was eliminated by averaging the signal from the two voxels, prior to fitting (which included correcting for phase and resonance frequency). Additionally, metabolite levels are expressed as a mole % relative to the total 31 P signal.
  • the two elderly depressed subjects were diagnosed with MDD according to DSM-IV criteria. No previous antidepressant medications were taken by the subjects in the three months prior to the study.
  • Subject #1 has baseline, 6 and 12 week HDRS scores of 15, 1 and 0 and subject #2 had scores of 20, 17, and 3, respectively.
  • both depressed subjects were clinically improved at endpoint, fulfilling criteria for remission (HDRS ⁇ 8).
  • Medical conditions diagnosed in the depressed subjects included s/p knee arthroscopy, s/p cervical disk removal, hearing loss and benign prostatic hypertrophy in subject #1 and benign prostatic hypertrophy in subject #2. No clinically significant abnormalities were found in the laboratory exams and EKG of either depressed subject.
  • Baseline, 6, and 12 weeks CIRS were 7, 6, and 5 for subject #1; and 4, 4, and 2 for subject #2, respectively.
  • the change reflects the improvement of depressive symptomatology.
  • Side effects from ALCAR treatment were mild and included dry mouth in subject #1 and a slight increase in perspiration in subject #2.
  • FIG. 2 illustrates the prefrontal and basal ganglia PCr and PME(s- ⁇ c ) levels at baseline, 6 and 12 weeks for the two depressed subjects and the mean PCr and PME(s-Tc) levels for the six normal controls.
  • the PME(s- ⁇ c ) resonance is predominantly composed of phosphocholine, phosphoethanolamine and inositol- 1 -phosphate which are precursors in membrane phospholipid metabolism.
  • the increased PME(s- ⁇ c ) in depression, as also observed by others is not fully understood and will require further study.
  • ALCAR treatment seems to restore PME(s- ⁇ c ) levels to normal and there was a trend for the decreasing PME levels to correlate with clinical improvement.
  • twelve weeks of ALCAR treatment also elevated PCr, a high-energy phosphate metabolite which is an immediate precursor of ATP.
  • MDD is a major, world-wide health problem. There is a need for new treatment approaches that have a wide margin of safety and can speed the onset to remission and reduce the rate of recurrence in this major mental health problem.
  • the molecular and metabolic factors that underlie MDD and contribute to the slow and variable treatment response are further identified. Since ALCAR has demonstrated beneficial effects on neurodegenerative processes as well as beneficial effects on energy metabolism, membrane structure/function/metabolism, and neurotrophic effects, it is used in treatement of MDD. Many of the metabolic and molecular processes in adolescent and non-geriatric subjects are altered by ALCAR and thus are amenable to ALCAR treatment.
  • ALCAR treatment decreases levels of phosphomonoesters (PME) and increases levels of phospocreatine (PCr) in a brain of an adolescent or non-geriatric human subject with depression or bi-polar depression.
  • PME phosphomonoesters
  • PCr phospocreatine
  • ALCAR also produces beneficial changes to membrane phospholipid and high-energy phosphate metabolism in a brain a brain of an adolescent or non-geriatric human subject with depression or bi-polar depression.
  • a pharmacologically acceptable salt of ALCAR is any salt of the latter with an acid that does not give rise to toxic or side effects. These acids are well known to pharmacologists and to experts in pharmaceutical technology.
  • One preferred form of daily dosing of ALCAR for clinical use is a composition comprising an amount of an acetyl L-carnitine, preferably equivalent to 0.1 to 3 g, and preferably 0.5 to 3 g per day.
  • ALCAR does not appear to induce mania in animal models or in clinical trials to date. Since animal and basic science studies demonstrate that ALCAR shares several important molecular mechanisms with lithium, but without lithium's potential toxicity, ALCAR could provide prophylactic effects against suicidality. Given ALCAR' s similarity to lithium at several molecular mechanistic levels, ALCAR is effective in treating bipolar depression and preventing recurrent episodes. Long-term therapy of MDD with therapeutic agents that have molecular properties that slow or reverse neurodegenerative changes as well as behavioral changes is desirable. ALCAR is one such therapeutic agent. Few existing 31 P and 1 H MRSI studies of MDD provide findings for compounds which demonstrate both membrane phospholipid and high-energy phosphate changes in the brain of individuals with MDD.
  • ALCAR can interact with both cholinergic and serotonergic neurotransmitter systems, it will modulate neurobiological and psychobiological activities controlled by these two neurotransmitter systems. This partially explains ALCAR's antidepressant activity.
  • ALCAR has been shown to provide a protective effect in several animal models of brain energetic stress.
  • ALCAR also has been shown to be an effective treatment of MDD which is associated with neurodegenerative and metabolic changes consistent with energetic stress.
  • FIG. 4 is a block diagram illustrating an effect of ALCAR on in vitro 31 P MRS ⁇ -GP and PCr levels under hypoxic (30 seconds) and normoxic conditions in Fischer 344 rats.
  • FIG. 5 is a block diagram illustrating an effect of ALCAR on in vitro 31 P MRS phospholipid levels under hypoxic and normoxic conditions in Fischer 344 rats.
  • the rat brain responds differentially to brief energetic stress (30 seconds of hypoxia) depending on the age of the animal.
  • ALCAR 75 mg/kg animal weight injected intraperitoneally 1 hour before sacrificing the animal
  • FIGS, x and x were investigated.
  • FIG. 6 is a block diagram illustrating a percent change of in vivo 31 P MRSI metabolite levels and PME, PDE linewidths [full width at half maximum (fwhm)] of 2 MDD subjects compared with 13 control subjects.
  • the methods describe herein treat depression and bi-polar depression with ALCAR, thereby avoiding unwanted side-effects exhibited by conventional antidepressant agents.
  • ALCAR also helps prevents recurrent episodes of depression and bi-polar depression.
  • Chronic alcoholism is a diverse and heterogeneous disorder that can be dichotomized into cognitively intact and cognitively impaired subgroups.
  • ethanol has been shown to have both acute and chronic effects on: (1) Membrane biophysical properties; (2) Membrane composition and metabolism; (3) Protein phosphorylation; (4) Lipid metabolic signaling; and (5) Lipoprotein transport of cholesterol.
  • Cognitive status was determined by an index from the Halstead-Reitan Battery (HRB). Regionally specific molecular measures distinguish: (1) controls from chronic unimpaired (CUCAL) and impaired (CICAL) subjects; and (2) cognitively unimpaired from cognitively unimpaired alcoholism subjects.
  • FIG. 7 is a flow diagram illustrating a Method 40 for diagnosing chronic alcoholism in a human.
  • Step 42 molecular alterations in membrane phospholipid and high-energy phosphate metabolism are examined in a human brain with a medical imaging process.
  • Step 44 molecular alterations in synaptic transport vesicles are examined with the medical imaging process.
  • Step 46 molecular alternations in phosphorylated proteins are examined with the medical imaging process.
  • Step 48 and molecular alterations in metabolites with N-acetyl moieties and gangliosides are examined with the medical imaging process.
  • Step 50 the plural examined molecular alterations are used to determine if a conclusion of cognitively impaired chronic alcoholism in the human is suggested.
  • the present invention is not limited to such a embodiment and imaging and molecular alterations can also be used to practice the invention. A statistical analysis was completed.
  • SAS PROC GENMOD This is a Generalized Linear Model in version 8 of SAS software that allows analysis of correlated data arising from repeated measurements when the measurements are assumed to be multivariate. However, the present invention is not limited to using SAS and other statistical packages can also be use. Main effect terms used: Diagnosis, Brain Region, and Age. Interaction terms: Diagnosis * Brain Region. Table 1. illustrates experimental results.
  • FIGS. 8 and 9 The molecular changes found and illustrated in FIGS. 8 and 9 primarily involve membrane repair, with faulty repair processes in individuals with cognitive impairment, predominantly in posterior regions of the brain. These experimental results reveal regional molecular/metabolic alterations of phospholipid and ganglioside metabolism which distinguish cognitively impaired and cognitively unimpaired chronic alcoholism subjects from controls and cognitively impaired from cognitively unimpaired subjects.
  • FIG. 10 is flow diagram illustrating a Method 46 for diagnosing chronic alcoholism in a human.
  • a human brain is imaged with a medical imaging process.
  • a first signal intensity for membrane phospholipid building blocks including phosphomonoesters (PME(s- ⁇ c )) is measured in left inferior parietal regions of a human brain.
  • a second signal intensity for synaptic/transport vesicles including phosphodiesters (PDE(i- ⁇ c )) is measured in right inferior parietal regions of the human brain.
  • a third signal intensity for lipid/protein glycosylation intermediates and membrane phospholipid cofactors ( ⁇ - ⁇ )ATP) is measured in a left occipital region of the human brain.
  • a fourth signal intensity for N-acetylaspartate/phosphocreatine+creatine (NAA/PCr+Cr) reflecting increased N-acetylaspartate or N-acetylated sugars is measured in a left superior temporal region of the human brain.
  • Step 58 determine if a conclusion of cognitively impaired chronic alcoholism in the human is suggested using the plural measurements.
  • the CUCAL subjects had increased measures of phosphomonoesters in the right occipital region, suggesting that neural membrane repair mechanisms are operating in the CUCAL subjects.
  • the CICAL subjects had: Increased membrane phospholipid building blocks in the left inferior parietal and occipital; decreases in measures of phosphorylated proteins in the right inferior parietal; increases in measures of lipid and protein glycoslyation in the left inferior parietal and occipital; and increases in measures of N-acetylaspartate in the left superior temporal, right basal ganglia, and right inferior parietal regions.
  • Subjects with schizophrenia illustrate molecular underpinnings for cognitive impairment similar to those observed in some chronic alcoholism subjects.
  • Changes in chronic schizophrenia males i.e., cognitively impaired versus cognitively unimpaired
  • the cognitively impaired chronic schizophrenia subjects do not have the neural membrane repair mechanisms [i.e., TPME(s- ⁇ c ), t( ⁇ - ⁇ )ATP, T NAA/PCr+Cr] which are seen in the chronic alcoholism subjects.
  • TPME(s- ⁇ c ) t( ⁇ - ⁇ )ATP, T NAA/PCr+Cr
  • SAS PROC GENMOD This is a Generalized Linear Model in version 8 of SAS software that allows analysis of correlated data arising from repeated measurements when the measurements are assumed to be multivariate. However, the present invention is not limited to using SAS and other statistical packages can also be use. Main effect terms used: Diagnosis, Brain Region, and Age. Interaction terms: Diagnosis * Brain Region. Table 2 illustrates experimental results. Cognitively Unimpaired Schizophrenia Subjects:
  • Impairment Rating (AIR) Score 1.6 +/- 0.5
  • FIGS. 11-13 illustrate that compared to chronic alcoholism subjects similar metabolic patterns were not observed in chronic schizophrenia subjects (cognitively unimpaired or impaired) and were not observed in middle age smokers after nicotine challenge.
  • the HRB-based AIR proved to be a valid indicator of metabolic differences between cognitively impaired and unimpaired subjects.
  • Several of the striking molecular findings in the chronic alcoholism subjects are in regions of the brain (basal ganglia and right inferior parietal) that have been implicated by neuropsychological findings of complex motor and visual-spatial deficits.

Abstract

Chronic alcoholism is a diverse and heterogeneous disorder that can be dichotomized into cognitively intact and cognitively impaired subgroups. At a molecular level, ethanol has been shown to have both acute and chronic effects on: Membrane biophysical properties, Membrane composition and metabolism, Protein phosphorylation, Lipid metabolic signaling, Lipoprotein transport of cholesterol. Actual molecular underpinnings are determined for cognitive impairment seen in some chronic alcoholism subjects including molecular/metabolic alterations of phospholipid and ganglioside metabolisms.

Description

Title: METHOD AND SYSTEM FOR DIAGNOSIS OF
NEUROPSYCHIATRIC DISORDERS INCLUDING CHRONIC ALCOHOLISM
CROSS REFERENCES TO RELATED APPLICATIONS
[0001] This application is a Continuation-In-Part (CIP) of U.S. application no. 11/117,126, filed April 27, 2005, which is a CIP of U.S. application no. 10/359,560, filed February 7, 2003, which claims priority to U.S. Provisional application no. 60/354,323, filed February 7, 2002, contents of all of which are incorporated by reference.
FIELD OF THE INVENTION
[0002] The present invention relates to methods adapted for diagnosis of the progression of neuropsychiatric disorders, specifically chronic alcoholism disease.
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
[0003] The clinical response to antidepressant treatment in later life follows a variable temporal response, with a median time to remission of 12 weeks. Newer antidepressants still demonstrate a disturbing side-effect profile in this fragile patient population. Thus, there is a need for the development of newer antidepressants. One such candidate is acetyl-L-carnitine (ALCAR), a molecule that is naturally present in human brain demonstrating only few side effects.
[0004] Seven parallel, double-blind, placebo-controlled studies have examined ALCAR efficacy in various forms of geriatric depression. Phosphorus magnetic resonance spectroscopy (31P MRS) directly provides information on membrane phospholipid and high-energy phosphate metabolism in defined, localized brain regions. Although in vivo 31P MRS studies in major depression are limited, there is evidence of altered high-energy phosphate and membrane phospholipid metabolism in the prefrontal and basal ganglia regions. Increased levels of precursors of membrane phospholipids [i.e., increased phosphomonoesters (PME) levels] in the frontal lobe of major depressed subjects compared to controls was reported. Other researchers also observed higher PME levels in bipolar subjects in their depressive phase compared with the euthymic state. In terms of high-energy phosphates, reduced levels of adenosine triphosphate (ATP) have been observed in both the frontal and basal ganglia of major depressed subjects. The level of the high-energy phosphate buffer, phosphocreatine (PCr), was lower in severely depressed subjects compared with mildly depressed subjects. Accordingly, the relationship between membrane phospholipid and high-energy phosphate metabolism as assessments of beneficial results in the treatment of depression are recognized.
EPIDEMIOLOGY OF DEPRESSIVE DISORDERS
[0005] Depressive disorders (i.e., major depression, dysthymia, bipolar disorder) are among the most common and disabling medical conditions throughout the world. For example, about 9.5% of the US adult population will suffer from a form of depression during any given year which is approximately 18.8 million people. In addition, 16-18% of women and 10% of men (3-4 million) will experience some form of depression. The lifetime risk for depression is approximately 15-20% regardless of gender.
[0006] When one episode of depression is experienced, there is a 50% likelihood of recurrent episodes. When a second episode of depression occurs, there is a 80- 90% likelihood of recurrent episodes and 75% of depressive disorders are recurrent.
[0007] It is estimated 20% of depressed individuals will attempt suicide and 6% will be successful. 75% of those committing suicide have a depressive disorder. The rate of successful suicide is four times greater in men.
[0008] About 10% of people with depression also will experience episodes of mania. Bipolar depressive episodes usually last longer, have a greater likelihood of psychotic features, and convey a greater risk of suicide. Bipolar disorder may be misdiagnosed as depression resulting in inappropriate treatment that may worsen the disease progression and outcome.
[0009] Depression is a acotraveler with a number of other medical and psychiatric conditions and numerous medications can cause depressive symptoms.
[0010] The prevailing dogma concerning the pathophysiology of depressive disorders (major depression, dysthymia, bipolar disorder) is that of an altered neurotransmitter receptor and many studies have been conducted to find such an alteration. To date, there has been no demonstration of an alteration in the binding site for any of the targeted neurotransmitters. Another problem with the altered neurotransmitters receptor dogma is that although the tricyclic antidepressants and selective neurotransmitter reuptake inhibitor drugs quickly enter brain and bind to their targeted sites, the clinical therapeutic effect does not occur for 4-6 weeks even though the onset of side effects is immediate.
[0011] Studies by Samuel Gershon over the years, since early 1950, have questioned the concepts of the established modes of action of antidepressants and those of the etiology of affective disorders.
[0012] In the early 50's a number of papers appeared suggesting that lithium not only had anti-manic properties but that it also exhibited anti-depressant and prophylactic activity in depression. These observations were confirmed by the controlled studies carried out by Schou et al. in Denmark and Prien et al. in Australia. This tended to indicate that perhaps a single neurotransmitter and a single receptor site would not qualify as the full explanation of their effects. In 1961, Gershon published a report in the Lancet on the psychiatric sequelae of organo-phosphorus insecticides in an exposed human population. Thus a role for acetylcholine in contributing to the production of major depressive disorder (MDD) was presented. This added to the complexity of current theories. In the 1970's an antidepressant Ludiomil was marketed with the effect of being a specific norepinephrine (NE) uptake inhibitor and thus exerting its effect by this route. This was an effective agent and was taken off the market because of other adverse effects (AE). In 1970 Gershon and colleagues carried out a number of experiments with synthesis inhibitors in patients undergoing treatment with different antidepressants and showed that only the inhibition of serotonin synthesis and not NE synthesis interfered with antidepressant outcomes.
[0013] These experiments demonstrated that a single transmitter or a single receptor could not account for therapeutic activity and clearly suggested other mechanisms are involved relating to membrane effects and second messenger systems. Antidepressant use has now clearly been associated with treatment emergent mania and the induction of rapid cycling in affective disorder patients (Tamada et al, 2004).
[0014] In addition to the concerns that have been established with the more classic bipolar I (BPI) type, much controversy surrounds the use of antidepressants in bipolar II (BPII) depression, a growing population. [0015] Antidepressant induced cycle acceleration has been reported to be more likely in BPII patients than in BPI (Altshuler et al, 1995; Joffe et al, 2002; Benazzi, 1997; Henry et al, 2001; Ramasubbu, 2001).
[0016] The data has increasingly shown the need for the use of effective antidepressants but at the same time has produced data indicating the need for caution with the agents available. These effective antidepressants cause both the risk of switch into mania and the even more serious effect of rapid cycling of the affective disorder and an alteration of the frequency and severity of episodes.
[0017] A different conceptual approach has been the subject of almost 3 decades of research by Jay W. Pettegrew. This concept is that there is nothing structurally wrong with neurotransmitter receptors, but the receptors are in a membrane environment that has altered molecular structure and dynamics. It is these membrane alterations that alter the functional dynamics of neurotransmitter receptors which in turn alters their physiological function. Dr. Pettegrew was one of the first to demonstrate alterations in membrane molecular dynamics in living cells obtained from patients with neuropsychiatric disorders. Alterations were similarly demonstrated in cells obtained from patients with depression (Pettegrew et al, 1979c; Pettegrew et al, 1980a; Pettegrew et al, 1981a; Pettegrew et al, 198; Pettegrew et al, 1979b; Pettegrew et al, 1980b; Pettegrew et al, 1981b; Pettegrew et al, 1982b; Pettegrew et al, 1987b; Pettegrew et al, 1993b; Pettegrew et al, 1990c; Pettegrew et al, 1993a; Pettegrew et al, 1990b). Lithium was shown to correct the membrane dynamic alterations observed in depressive patients.
[0018] Given the rather striking changes in membrane molecular dynamics, Dr. Pettegrew turned to investigate alterations in membrane metabolism (Pettegrew et al, 1978; Pettegrew and Minshew, 1981; Pettegrew et al, 1982a; Glonek et al, 1982a) (Pettegrew et al, 1979a; Glonek et al, 1982b; Cohen et al, 1984; Pettegrew et al, 1986; Pettegrew et al, 1987a; Pettegrew et al, 1988a; Pettegrew et al, 1988b; Pettegrew et al, 1990a; Pettegrew et al, 1991; Keshavan et al, 1991; Kanfer et al, 1993; Pettegrew et al, 1994; Singh et al, 1994; Pettegrew et al, 1995; Klunk et al, 1996; Geddes et al, 1997; Klunk et al, 1998; Pettegrew et al, 2001; Keshavan et al, 2003; Sweet et al, 2002) and again significant alterations were observed in several neuro-psychiatric disorders including major depressive disorder (Pettegrew et al, 2002). Again, lithium was shown to correct the alteration in membrane metabolism observed in patients with depression. CONCERNS ABOUT CURRENT CLASSES OF ANTIDEPRESSANTS IN DEPRESSIVE DISORDERS
[0019] Concerns have been accumulating on the widespread use of all the current classes of antidepressants. This is reflected in the recently published North American based treatment guidelines (Grunze et al., 2002; Hirschfeld et al, 2002); including those of the APA (Sachs et al, 2000). These recommendations have voiced considerable limitations and a conservative attitude to their use, recommending use be restricted to severe bipolar depressions (Goodwin & Jamison, 1990; Murray & Lopez, 1996; Bostwick & Pankratz, 2000). The recommendations go on to suggest that if antidepressants are used they should be withdrawn as early as possible; thus we are now seeing a shift away from both the use of the current classes of antidepressants and recommendations for their long term use since they are associated with the following problems.
[0020] 1. The risk for induced mania. There is now established a considerable risk of antidepressant induced manic switching and/or rapid cycling. This is seen in both short term and long term exposures. For example with selective reuptake inhibitors (SRIs) clinical samples demonstrate length of switch that are not minimal, that is 15 to 27%. The authors of a number of review articles on this topic suggest that the real rates are around 40% for tricyclic antidepressants (TCAs) and 20% with new SRI antidepressants. Substance abuse has been shown to be a major predictor of antidepressant-induced mania.
[0021] 2. The risk of suicide in bipolar depressed patients. This risk is in and of itself a significant issue of concern. An analysis of SRIs and other novel antidepressants submitted to the FDA totaling nearly 20 thousand cases showed that there was no significant difference in completed or attempted suicides between patients on antidepressants and placebo treated groups. Simply stated, it appears that antidepressants as a group have not been shown to adequately reduce suicide rates. However, the data on lithium is in contrast to this with a very well established finding of its prophylactic effects against suicidality in a variety of diagnostic categories.
[0022] 3. Antidepressant efficiency in treating bipolar depression. Prophylactic studies with antidepressants are not robust in the treatment of depressive episodes in bipolar disorders. Again, in contrast, the evidence of efficiency in treating bipolar depression with mood stabilizers is much higher (e.g., lithium and lamotrogine).
[0023] 4. The potential value of other antidepressant classes. Based on this extensive new information as to the cautions that need to be employed in the use of the standard and SRI antidepressant classes, there is an urgent need for new classes of antidepressant thymoleptics. One such agent, ALCAR has a body of literature that supports the possibility of its therapeutic value in a number of depressive categories.
[0024] In view of its unique biochemical effects on the nervous system and its stabilizing effects on membrane functions, ALCAR' s antidepressant activity may indeed provide a unique opportunity to address the above-described concerns. Since ALCAR is a natural substance and has been shown to have antidepressant properties without significant side effects and without the potential to induce mania, it is a logical new therapeutic approach.
[0025] ALCAR has been shown to have beneficial effects on age-related neurodegenernation and brain energetic stress providing a rationale for its use in Major Depressive Disorder (MDD). In European clinical trials to date, ALCAR has demonstrated antidepressant activity in MDD subjects without significant side effects (Villardita et al, 1983; Tempesta et al, 1987; Nasca et al, 1989; Bella et al, 1990; Fulgente et al, 1990; Garzya et al, 1990).
OVERVIEW OF BIOLOGICAL FINDINGS IN MAJOR DEPRESSIVE DISORDER
[0026] MDD has been shown to be associated with changes in: (1) neurotransmitter systems such as serotonin, acetylcholine, and noradrenergic; (2) membranes (e.g., composition, metabolism, biophysical parameters, signal transduction, and ion transport); (3) brain energy metabolism; and (4) brain structure. Computed tomography (CT) and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) studies in subjects with non-demented, geriatric, major depressive disorder suggest neurodegenerative changes are associated with vascular risk factors (Krishnan, 1993). Beyond brain structural changes, there is evidence from functional neuroimaging studies for molecular, metabolic, and physiologic brain changes suggestive of energetic stress in subjects with MDD. Positron emission tomography (PET) and single photon emission computed tomography (SPECT) studies show a reduced fluorodeoxyglucose metabolic rate (rCMRg) (Buchsbaum et al, 1986) and reduced regional cerebral blood flow (rCBF) (Schlegel et al, 1989) in the basal ganglia and a decrease in rCMRg and rCBF in the frontal lobes of subjects with MDD (Mayberg et al, 1994). Of the neuroimaging methods, 31P and 1H magnetic resonance spectroscopic imaging (31P-1H MRSI) studies provide direct information on membrane phospholipid and high-energy phosphate metabolism (31P MRSI) as well as a marker for neuronal structural and metabolic integrity (1H MRSI). 31P and 1H MRS studies of subjects with MDD indicate alterations in high-energy phosphate and membrane phospholipid metabolism in basal ganglia and prefrontal cortex (Moore et al, 1991 Ά; Charles et al, 1994; Pettegrew et al 2002).
NEUROMORPHOMETRIC CHANGES IN MDD
[0027] Neuroimaging studies have enhanced our understanding of the pathophysiology of MDD. MRI studies provide neuromorphometric correlates of MDD (reviewed by Botteron & Figiel, 1997). MRI studies of third ventricle size in major depression give mixed results; Coffey et al. (1993) report no difference in ventricle size and Rabins et al. (1991) report increased third ventricle size in subjects with MDD compared with controls. Brain MRI subcortical white matter hyperintensities have been reported in the basal ganglia, periventricular region, and frontal lobe of elderly depressed (Coffey et al, 1988; Figiel et al, 1989; Rabins et al, 1991). There have been reports of decreased volumes of the basal ganglia in MDD; Husain et al (1991) found reduced volume in the putamen, Krishnan et al.(1993) found reduced volume in the caudate, and Dupont et al (1995) found reduced volume in the caudate, lenticular nucleus, and thalamus. Coffey et al. (1993) report an approximately 7% reduction in bilateral frontal lobe volume in subjects with MDD.
[0028] These studies reveal neurodegenerative change in MDD. Other as yet unknown molecular and metabolic factors could predispose to both depression and the neuromorphometric changes associated with it
MAGNETIC RESONANCE SPECTROSCOPY STUDIES OF MAJOR DEPRESSIVE DISORDER (MDD)
[0029] While there are several MRS studies in bipolar disorder (reviewed by Moore & Renshaw, 1997b), there are only two 31P MRS studies (Kato et al, 1992; Moore et al, 1997a) and one 1H MRS analysis of MDD (Charles et al, 1994). Kato et al (1992), using a coronal slice DRESS 31P MRS protocol, examined the frontal cortex of 12 subjects (age 35.3V12.1 years) with MDD, 10 subjects (age 42V8.6 years) with bipolar disorder and 22 control subjects (age 36.1 Vl 1.5 years). Although the pH and PME levels were significantly higher in euthymic MDD subjects compared with euthymic bipolar subjects, no significant differences were found for 31P MRS parameters of MDD subjects compared with control subjects. A study by Moore et al. (1997a) using a 31P MRS ISIS protocol, measured 31P metabolites in a 45 cm3 voxel containing the bilateral basal ganglia in 35 unmedicated subjects (age 37.2Vlain 8.5 years) with MDD and 18 control subjects (age 38.2V9.9 years). There was a 16% reduction in ATP (β-ATP peak) in the MDD subjects. The PCr/Pi ratio of MDD subjects compared with control subjects did not change. This study indicates that an abnormality in basal ganglia high-energy phosphate metabolism is associated with MDD. A 1H MRS study by Charles et al. (1994), using a combination of the STEAM technique for spatial lipid suppression and ID CSI for additional spatial localization of the basal ganglia and thalamus, examined seven subjects with MDD (age range 63-76, mean = 71.4 years ) compared with ten control subjects (age range 65-75, mean = 68.9 years). The subjects with MDD were medication free for two (1 subject) or three (6 subjects) weeks. The authors report an increase in the TMA MRS peak in the basal ganglia of MDD subjects and subsequent drop in the trimethlyamine (TMA) peak in four subjects after treatment. We have recently observed an increase in PME and a decrease in PCr in two subjects with MDD (Pettegrew et al, unpublished results).
MOLECULAR AND METABOLIC EFFECTS OF ALCAR
[0030] There is neuroimaging evidence for neurodegeneration and a reduction in energy metabolite levels and rCBF in MDD. These findings provide a rationale for the use of ALCAR in MDD1 as there is a considerable body of research that indicates that ALCAR has a positive modulating influence on membrane structure, function and metabolism, energy metabolism, and the physiology and metabolism of neurotrophic factors. There also is clinical evidence that ALCAR is beneficial in the treatment of neurodegenerative disorders as well as normal aging-related processes and the treatment of geriatric depression. A thorough review of the possible CNS actions of ALCAR has appeared (Calvani & Carta, 1991; Pettegrew et al, 2000). What follows is a brief review of the metabolic, physiologic, behavioral, and clinical roles for ALCAR.
ALCAR'S EFFECT ON ENERGY METABOLISM [0031] ALCAR has been shown to exert a beneficial effect on brain metabolism after energetic stresses. In a canine model of complete, global cerebral ischemia and reperfusion, ALCAR treated animals exhibited significantly lower neurological deficit scores (p = 0.0037) and more normal cerebral cortex lactate/pyruvate ratios than did vehicle-treated control animals (Rosenthal et at, 1992). In a rat cyanide model of acute hypoxia, increased rate of phosphatide acid formation, possibly reflecting increased phospholipase C activity was observed and spatial navigation performance in a Morris task was impaired. Chronic treatment with ALCAR attenuated the cyanide-induced behavioral deficit but had no effect on energy- dependent phosphoinositide metabolism suggesting ALCAR affected free fatty acid metabolism by increasing the reservoir of activated acyl groups involved in the reacylation of membrane phospholipids (Blokland et at, 1993). In a canine model employing 10 minutes of cardiac arrest followed by restoration of spontaneous circulation for up to 24 hours, ALCAR eliminated the reperfusion elevation of brain protein carbonyl groups which reflect free radical-induced protein oxidation (Liu et at, 1993). In a rat streptozotocin-induced model of brain hypoglycemia, ALCAR attenuated both the streptozotocin-induced impairment in spatial discrimination learning and decrease in hippocampal choline acetyltransferase activity (Prickaerts et al, 1995). A deficiency in ALCAR has been shown to be a cause for altered nerve myo-inositol content, Na -K -ATPase activity, and motor conduction velocity in the streptozotocin-diabetic rat (Stevens et at, 1996). Finally, sparse-fur mice have a deficiency of hepatic ornithine transcarbamylase resulting in congenital hyperammonemic with elevated cerebral ammonia and glutamine and reduced cerebral cytochrome oxidase activity and a reduction in cerebral high-energy phosphate levels. ALCAR treatment increased cytochrome oxidase subunit I mRNA, and restored both cytochrome oxidase activity and the levels of high-energy phosphates (Rao et at, 1997). Our studies of hypoxia in Fischer 344 rats demonstrate ALCAR' s beneficial effect on brain membrane phospholipid and high- energy phosphate metabolism (Pettegrew et at, unpublished results.
ALCAR'S EFFECT ON MEMBRANE COMPOSITION, STRUCTURE, AND DYNAMICS
[0032] ALCAR has been shown to effect membrane structure and function in a number of different systems. ALCAR administration affects the inner mitochondrial membrane protein composition in rat cerebellum (Villa et at, 1988), increases human erythrocyte membrane stability possibly by interacting with cytoskeletal proteins (Arduini et at, 1990), increases human erythrocyte cytoskeletal protein- protein interactions (Butterfield & Rangachari, 1993), and alters the membrane dynamics of human erythrocytes in the region of the glycerol backbone of membrane phospholipid bilayers (Arduini et al, 1993).
ALCAR'S ENHANCEMENT OF NERVE GROWTH FACTOR ACTIVITY
[0033] A number of studies have demonstrated that ALCAR enhances the ■neurotrophic activity of nerve growth factor (NGF). ALCAR increases NGF binding in aged rat hippocampus and basal forebrain (Angelucci et al, 1988), increases NGF receptor expression in rat striatum, and increases choline acetyltranferase activity in the same area (De Simone R. et al, 1991), enhances PC 12 cells response to NGF (Taglialatela et al, 1991), increases the level of NGF receptor (P75NGFR) mRNA (Taglialatela et al, 1992), increases choline acetyltransferase activity and NGF levels in adult rats following total fimbria-fornix transection (Piovesan et al, 1994; 1995), and enhances motoπieuron survival in rat facial nucleus after facial nerve transection (Piovesan et al, 1995).
INFLUENCE OF ALCAR ON CHOLINERGIC AND SEROTONERGIC NEUROTRANSMITTER SYSTEMS
[0034] ALCAR has some cholinergic activity (Fritz, 1963; Tempesta et al , 1985), possibly because it shares conformational properties with acetylcholine (Sass & Werness, 1973). This is interesting as acetylcholine may play an important role in the chronobiological organization of the human body (Morley & Murrin, 1989; Wee & Turek, 1989), mediating also some effects of light on the circadian clock (Wee & Turek, 1989). Acetylcholine is implicated in the regulation of the hypothalamic- pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis (Mueller et al, 1977; Risch et al, 1981) and cholinomimetics are effective on the HPA axis (Janowsky et al, 1981; Risch et al, 1981). ALCAR also seems to interfere with the serotonergic system (Tempesta et al, 1982; 1985). There is ample evidence supporting a reduction in serotonergic activity in depression (Ashcroft et al, 1966; Asberg et al, 1976; Cochran et al, 1976; Traskman et al, 1981; Stanley & Mann, 1983); although these results have not always been confirmed (Bowers, 1974; Murphy et al, 1978). The efficacy of 5-HTP also has been reported in involutional depression (Aussilloux et al, 1975). Moreover the selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRI) antidepressants increase serotonergic transmission and are currently widely used in treating MDD (Aberg- Wistedt et al, 1982; Stark & Hardison, 1985). Serotonin plays an important role in the regulation of circadian rhythms (Kordon et al, 1981; Leibiwitz et al, 1989) and there is consistent evidence that it affects Cortisol secretion (Imura et al, 1973; Krieger, 1978; Meltzer et al, 1982).
ALCAR'S EFFECT ON AGING-RELATED METABOLIC CHANGES
[0035] ALCAR has been demonstrated to reverse aging-related changes in brain ultrastructure, neurotransmitter systems, membrane receptors, mitochondrial proteins, membrane structure and metabolism, memory, and behavior. ALCAR restores the number of axosomatic and giant bouton vesicles in aged rat hippocampus (Badiali et al, 1987), reduces aging-related lipofuscin accumulation in prefrontal pyramidal neurons and hippocampal CA3 neurons in rats (Kohjimoto et al, 1988; Amenta et al, 1989), and reduces aging-related changes in the rat hippocampal mossy fiber system (Ricci et al, 1989). ALCAR reduces the age-dependent loss of glucocorticoid receptors in rat hippocampus (Ricci et al, 1989), attenuates the age- dependent decrease in NMDA receptors in rat hippocampus (Fiore & Rampello, 1989; Castorina et al, 1993; 1994; Piovesan et al, 1994; and reviewed by Castorina & Ferraris, 1988), and reduces age-related changes in the dopaminergic system of aging mouse brain (Sershen et al, 1991). Age-related changes in mitochondria also are reduced by ALCAR. ALCAR increases cytochrome oxidase activity in rat cerebral cortex, hippocampus, and striatum (Curti et al, 1989), restores to normal reduced transcripts of mitochondrial DNA in rat brain and heart but not liver (Gadaleta et al, 1990), increases cytochrome oxidase activity of synaptic and non- synaptic mitochondria (Villa & Gorini, 1991), reverses age-related reduction in the phosphate carrier and cardiolipin levels in heart mitochondria (Paradies et al, 1992), reverses age-related reduction in cytochrome oxidase and adenine nucleotide transferase activity in rat heart by modifying age-related changes in mitochondrial cardiolipin levels (Paradies et al, 1994; 1995), and reverses age-related alteration in the protein composition of the inner mitochondrial membrane (Villa et al, 1988). ALCAR also increases synaptosomal high-affinity choline uptake in the cerebral cortex of aging rats (Curti et al, 1989; Piovesan et al, 1994), increases choline acetyltransferase activity in aged rat striatum (De Simone R. et al, 1991; Taglialatela et al, 1994), modulates age-related reduction in melatonin synthesis (Esposti et al, 1994), reverses the age-related elevation in free and esterified cholesterol and arachidonic acid (20:4) in rat plasma (Ruggiero et al, 1990), and increases PCr and reduces lactate/pyruvate and sugar phosphate levels in adult and aged rat brain (Aureli et al, 1990). Age-related changes in NGF are reduced by ALCAR: ALCAR increases NGF receptor expression in rat striatum (De Simone R. et al, 1991) and in PC12 cells (Castorina et al, 1993); enhances the effect of NGF in aged dorsal root ganglia neurons (Manfridi et al, 1992); exerts a neurotrophic effect in three month old rats after total fimbria transection (Piovesan et al, 1994); and increases NGF levels in aged rat brain (Taglialatela et al, 1994). ALCAR has been shown in aged rats to modulate synaptic structural dynamics (Bertoni-Freddari et al, 1994) and improve measures of behavior (Angelucci, 1988; Kohjimoto et al, 1988) as well as memory (Barnes et al, 1990; Caprioli et al, 1990; 1995). ALCAR has been reported to normalize the pituitary-adrenocortical hyperactivity in pathological brain aging (Nappi et al, 1988; Ghirardi et al, 1994). We have reported that ALCAR improves standardized clinical measures and measures of membrane phospholipid and high-energy phosphate metabolism in subjects with Alzheimer' s disease (AD) measured by in vivo 31P MRS (Pettegrew et al, 1995). We now have data in a rat hypoxia model which demonstrate that ALCAR has more beneficial effects on aged rats (30 months) than on adolescent (1 month) or adult (12 months) animals (Pettegrew et al, unpublished results).
ANTIDEPRESSANT EFFECTS OF ALCAR
[0036] In European clinical trials, ALCAR has been shown to have significant antidepressant activity in geriatric depressed subjects with minimal or no side effects (Villardita et al, 1983; Tempesta et al, 1987; Nasca et al, 1989; Bella et al, 1990; Fulgente et al, 1990; Garzya et al, 1990; Gecele et al, 1991). Villardita et al (1983) reported a double-blind ALCAR/placebo study of 28 subjects (18 males, 10 females; 72.3V7.3 years). Sixteen subjects were treated with ALCAR (1.5 gm/day; baseline HDRS = 26.3V3.3) and 12 patients were treated with placebo (baseline HDRS = 26.6V3.2) for 40 days. By day 40, the ALCAR treated subjects showed significant improvement (p < 0.001) in the Hamilton Depressive Rating Scale (HDRS) but the placebo treated subjects did not. There were no side effects to ALCAR. Tempesta et al. (1987) in an open label, cross over study of 24 subjects over the age of 70 years, all of whom were nursing home residents, reported ALCAR (2 gm/day) to be highly effective in reducing HDRS scores, especially in subjects with more severe clinical symptoms. Again there were no reported ALCAR side effects. In a simple blind ALCAR/placebo study of 20 subjects (10 ALCAR treated subjects; 62.5V5.7 years, 8 males, 2 females, baseline HDRS = 44.9V3.1 and 10 placebo treated subjects; 62.5V5.3 years, 8 males, 2 females, baseline HDRS = 43.9V2.8), Nasca et al (1989) demonstrated a significant improvement in the HDRS scores of ALCAR treated subjects at day 40 of treatment (p < 0.001). There was no improvement in the placebo treated group. Similar significant beneficial effects of ALCAR on the HDRS were observed in randomized, double-blind, ALCAR/placebo studies of Garzya et al. (1990) (28 subjects; ages 70-80 years; ALCAR 1.5 gm/day), Fulgente et al. (1990) [60 subjects; 70-80 years; ALCAR 3.0 gm/day; baseline HDRS (ALCAR = 25; placebo = 23); day 60 HDRS (ALCAR = 12; placebo = 22); p # 0.0001], and Bella et al. (1990) [60 subjects, 60-80 years, ALCAR 3.0 gm/day; baseline HDRS (ALCAR = 22; placebo = 21); day 60 HDRS (ALCAR = 11; placebo = 20); p # 0.0001]. ALCAR was well tolerated in these studies even at the higher dosages. A double-blind, ALCAR/placebo study by Gecele et al. (1991) (30 subjects, 66-79 years, ALCAR 2 gm/day) not only showed a significant improvement in the HDRS of ALCAR treated subjects (p < 0.001) but a significant reduction in both mean Cortisol levels (p < 0.001) as well as 12 am (p < 0.001) and 4 pm (p < 0.01) Cortisol levels.
[0037] Since acetyl-L-carnitine (ALCAR) is a natural substance and has been shown to have antidepressant properties without significant side effects and without the potential to induce mania, it is a logical new therapeutic approach.
COGNITION IN ALCOHOLISM
[0038] Chronic alcoholism is a diverse and heterogeneous disorder that can be dichotomized into cognitively intact and cognitively impaired subgroups. At a molecular level, ethanol has been shown to have both acute and chronic effects on: Membrane biophysical properties, Membrane composition and metabolism, Protein phosphorylation, Lipid metabolic signaling, Lipoprotein transport of cholesterol. There may be molecular underpinnings for cognitive impairment seen in some chronic alcoholism subjects.
[0039] There is a long-standing need within the medical community for a diagnostic tool for assessing cognitive impairment seen in some chronic alcoholism subjects. Such a tool would be extremely useful in the development of treatments that delay or prevent cognitive impairment due to chronic alcoholism.
[0040] REFERENCES
[0041] Aberg-Wistedt A, Ross SB, Jostell KG & Sjoqvist B. A double-blind study of a 5-HT uptake inhibitor in endogenous depression. Acta Psychiatr Scand 66:66-82, 1982. [0042] Aitchison J. Tfie Statistical Analysis of Compositional Data, Chapter 7,
London: Chapman and Hall, 1986, Alexopoulos GS, Meyers BS, Young RC, Kakuma T, Feder M, Einhorn A & Rosendahl E. Recovery in geriatric depression. Arch Gen Psychiatry 53:305-312, 1996.
[0043] Altshuler LL, Post RM, Leverich GS, Mikalauskas K, Rosoff A and
Ackerman L (1995) Antidepressant-induced mania and cycle acceleration: A controversy revisited. [see comment]. Am. J. Psychiatry 152, 1130-1138.
[0044] Amenta F, Ferrante F, Lucreziotti R, Ricci A & Ramacci MT. Reduced lipofuscin accumulation in senescent rat brain by long-term acetyl-L-carnitine treatment. Arch Gerontol Geriatr 9:147-153, 1989.
[0045] Angelucci L, Ramacci MT, Taglialatela G, Hulsebosch C, Morgan B,
Werrbach-Perez K & Perez-Polo R. Nerve growth factor binding in aged rat central nervous system: effect of acetyl-L-carnitine. JNeurosci Res 20:491-496, 1988.
[0046] Arduini A, Gorbunov N, Arrigoni-Martelli E, Dottori S, Molajoni F,
Russo F & Federici G. Effects of L-carnitine and its acetate and propionate esters on the molecular dynamics of human erythrocyte membrane. Biochim Biophys Acta 1146:229-235, 1993.
[0047] Arduini A, Rossi M, Mancinelli G, Belfiglio M, Scurti R, Radatti G &
Shohet SB. Effect of L-carnitine and acetyl-L-carnitine on the human erythrocyte membrane stability and deformability. Life Sd 47:2395-2400, 1990.
[0048] Asberg M, Traskman L & Thoren P. 5-HIAA in the cerebrospinal fluid: A biochemical suicide predictor? Arch Gen Psychiatry 33:1193-1197, 1976.
[0049] Ashcroft GW, Crawford TBB, Eccleston D, Sharman DF, MacDougall
EJ, Stanton JB & Binns JK. 5-Hydroxyindole compounds in the cerebrospinal fluid of patients with psychiatric or neurological disease. Lancet ii: 1049-1052, 1966.
[0050] Aureli T, Miccheli A, Ricciolini R, Di Cocco ME, Ramacci MT,
Angelucci L, Ghirardi O & Conti F. Aging brain: Effect of acetyl-L-carnitine treatment on rat brain energy and phospholipid metabolism. A study by 31P and 1H NMR spectroscopy. Brain Res 526:108-112, 1990. [0051] Aussilloux CH, Castelnau D, Chiariny JF & Frassinet M. A propos d'une autre voie d'abord des etats depressifs les precurseurs de Ia serotonine. J Med (Montpellier) 10:23-25, 1975.
[0052] Badiali DL, Bonvicini F, Bianchi D, Bossoni G & Laschi R.
Ultrastructural aspects of ageing rat hippocampus and effects of L-acetyl-carnitine treatment. Drugs Under Experimental & Clinical Research 13:185-189, 1987.
[0053] Barnes CA, Markowska AL, Ingram DK, Kametani H, Spangler EL,
Lemken VJ & Olton DS. Acetyl-L-carnitine. 2: Effects on learning and memory performance of aged rats in simple and complex mazes. Neurobiol Aging 11:499-506, 1990.
[0054] Beekman AT, Deeg DJ, van Tilburg T, Smit JH, Hooijer C & van
Tilburg W. Major and minor depression in later life: a study of prevalence and risk factors. J Affective Disorders 36:65-75, 1995.
[0055] Bella R, Bondi R, Raffaele R & Pennisi G. Effect of acetyl-L-carnitine on geriatric patients suffering from dysthymic disorders. IntJ CHn Pharmacol Res 10:355-360, 1990.
[0056] Benazzi F (1997) Antidepressant-associated hypomania in outpatient depression: a 203-case study in private practice. J. Affective Disord. 46, 73-77.
[0057] Bertoni-Freddari C, Fattoretti P, Casoli T, Spagna C & Casell U.
Dynamic morphology of the synaptic junctional areas during aging: the effect of chronic acetyl-L-carnitine administration. Brain Res 656:359-366, 1994.
[0058] Birken DL & OldendorfWH. N-Acetyl-L-aspartic acid: A literature review of a compound prominent in 1H-NMR spectroscopic studies of brain. Neurosci Biobehav Rev 13:23-31, 1989.
[0059] Blazer DG, Hughes DC & George LK. The epidemiology of depression in an elderly community population. Gerontologist 27:281-287, 1987.
[0060] Blokland A, Bothmer J, Honig W & Jolles J. Behavorial and biochemical effects of acute central metabolic inhibition: effects of acetyl-L-carnitine. Eur J Pharmacology 235:275-281, 1993. [0061] Borson S. Psychiatric problems in the mentally ill elderly. In:
Comprehensive Textbook of Psychiatry, edited by HI Kaplan & BJ Sadock, 6th edition, p. 2586, 1995.
[0062] Borson S, Barnes RA, Kukull WA, Okimoto JT, Veith RC, Inui TS,
Carter W & Raskind MA. Symptomatic depression in elderly medical outpatients.I.Prevalence, demography, and health service utilization. J Am Geriatr Soc 34:341-347, 1986.
[0063] Bostwick JM & Pankratz VS. Affective disorders and suicide risk. Am.
J. Psychiatry, 157:1925-1932, 2000.
[0064] Botteron KN & Figiel GS. The neuromorphometry of affective disorders. In: Brain Imaging in Clinical Psychiatry, edited by KRR Krishnan & PM Doraiswamy. New York: Marcel Dekkerjnc, 1997, p. 145-184.
[0065] Bowers MB. Lumbar CSF 5-hydroxyindoleacetic acid and homovanillic acid in affective syndromes. JNervMentDis 158:325-330, 1974.
[0066] Buchsbaum MS, Wu J, DeLisi LE, Holcomb H, Kessler R, Johnson J,
King AC, Hazlett E, Langston K & Post RM. Frontal cortex and basal ganglia metabolic rates assessed by positron emission tomography with [I8F]2-deoxyglucose in affective illnness. J Affective Disord 10:137-152, 1986.
[0067] Burnell EE, Cullis PR & de Kruij ff B . Effects of tumbling and lateral diffusion on phosphatidylcholine model membrane 31 P-NMR lineshapes. Biochim Biophys Acta 603:63-69, 1980.
[0068] Butterfϊeld DA & Rangachari A. Acetylcarnitine increases membrane cytoskeletal protein-protein interactions. Life Sd 52:297-303, 1993.
[0069] Callahan CM, Hui SL, Nienaber NA, Musick BS & Tierney WM.
Longitudinal study of the depression and health services use among elderly primary care patients. J Am Geriatr Soc 42:833-838, 1994.
[0070] Calvani M & Carta A. Clues to the mechanism of action of acetyl-L- carnitine in the central nervous system. Dementia 2:1-6, 1991. [0071] Caprioli A, Ghirardi O, Ramacci MT & Angelucci L. Age-dependent deficits in radial maze performance in the rat: effect of chronic treatment with acetyl- L-carnitine. Progress In Neuro-Psychopharmacology & Biological Psychiatry 14:359-369, 1990.
[0072] Caprioli A, Markowska AL & Olton DS. Acetyl-L-Carnitine: chronic treatment improves spatial acquisition in a new environment in aged rats. J Gerontology Series A, Biological Sciences & Medical Sciences 50:B232-B236, 1995.
[0073] Castorina M, Ambrosini AM, Giuliani A, Pacifici L, Ramacci MT &
Angelucci L. A cluster analysis study of acetyl-L-carnitine effect on NMDA receptors in aging. Exp Gerontol 28:537-548, 1993.
[0074] Castornia M, Ambrosini AM, Pacific L, Ramacci MT & Angelucci L.
Age-dependent loss of NMDA receptors in hippocampus, striatum, and frontal cortex of the rat: prevention by acetyl-L-carnitine. Neurochem Res 19:795-798, 1994.
[0075] Cerdan S, Subramanian VH, Hilberman M, Cone J, Egan J, Chance B
& Williamson JR. 3 IP NMR detection of mobile dog brain phospholipids. Magn Reson Med 3:432-439, 1986.
[0076] Charles HC, Lazeyras KK, Krishnan KRR, Boyko OB, Payne M &
Moore D. Brain choline in depression: In vivo detection of potential pharmacodynamic effects of antidepressant therapy using hydrogen localized spectroscopy. Prog Neuropsychopharmacol Biol Psychiatry 18:1121-1127, 1994.
[0077] Cochran E, Robin E & Grote S. Regional serotonin levels in brain: a comparison of depressive suicide and alcoholic suicides with control. Biol Psychiatry 11:283-294, 1976.
[0078] Coffey CE, Figiel GS & Djang WT. Leukoencephalopathy in elderly depressed patients referred for ETC. Biol Psychiatry 24:143-161, 1988.
[0079] Coffey CE, Wilkerson WE, Weiner RD, Parashos IA, Djang WT,
Webb MC, Figiel GS & Spritzer CE. Quantative cerebral anatomy in depression. Arch Gen Psychiatry 50:7-16, 1993. [0080] Cohen MM, Pettegrew JW, Kopp SJ, Minshew N and Glonek T (1984)
P-31 nuclear magnetic resonance analysis of brain: normoxic and anoxic brain slices. Neurochem. Res. 9, 785-801.
[0081] Conwell Y. Suicide in elderly patients. In: Diagnosis and Treatment of
Depression in Late Life, edited by LS Schneider, CF Reynolds & BD Lebowitz. 1996, p. 397-418.
[0082] Cullis PR & DeKruijff B. Lipid polymorphism and the functional roles of lipids in biological membranes. Biochim Biophys Acta 559:399-420, 1979.
[0083] Curti D, Dagani F, Galmozzi MR & Marzatico F. Effect of aging and acetyl-L-carnitine on energetic and cholinergic metabolism in rat brain regions. Mech Ageing Develop 47:39-45, 1989.
[0084] de Beer R & van Ormondt D. Analysis of NMR data using time domain fitting procedures. In: NMR Basics, Principles and Progress, edited by P Diehl & EG Fluck. New York: Springer-Verlag, 1992, p. 201-258.
[0085] de GraafAA, vanDijk JE, & Bovee WMMJ. QUALITY: quantification improvement by converting lineshapes to the Lorentzian type. Magn Reson Med 13:343-357, 1990.
[0086] de Kruij ff B, Rietveld A & Cullis PR. 31 P-NMR studies on membrane phospholipids in microsomes, rat liver slices and intact perfused rat liver. Biochim Biophys Acta 600:343-357, 1980.
[0087] de Kruij ff B, Verkley AJ, van Echteld CJA, Gerritsen WJ, Mombers C,
Noordam PC & De Gier J. The occurance of lipidic particles in lipid bilayers as seen by 31P NMR and freeze-fracture electron-microscopy. Biochim Biophys Acta 555:200-209, 1979.
[0088] De Simone R., Ramacci MT & Aloe L. Effect of acetyl-L-carnitine on forebrain cholinergic neurons of developing rats, hit J Develop Neurosci 9:39-46, 1991.
[0089] Desu MM & Raghavarao D. Sample Size Methodology. New York:
Academic Press, 1990, page 30. [0090] Dew MA, Reynolds CF, Houck PR, Hall M, Buysse DJ, Frank E &
Kupfer DJ. Temporal profiles of the course of depression during treatment: Predictors of pathways toward recovery in the elderly. Arch Gen Psychiatry 54:1016-1024, 1997.
[0091] Dupont RM, Jernigan TL, Heindel W, Butters N, Shafer K, Wilson T,
Hesselink J & Gillin JC. Magnetic resonance imaging and mood disorders. Arch Gen Psychiatry 52:747-755, 1995.
[0092] Efron B & Tibshirani R. An Introduction to the Bootstrap. London:
Chapman and Hall, 1993.
[0093] Esposti D, Mariani M, Demartini G, Lucini V, Fraschini F & Mancia
M. Modulation of melatonin secretion by acetyl-L-carnitine in adult and old rats. J Pineal Res 17 : 132-136, 1994.
[0094] Figiel GS, Coffey CE & Weiner RD. Brain magnetic resonance imaging in elderly depressed patients receiving electroconvulsive therapy. Convulsive Ther 5:26-34, 1989.
[0095] Fiore L & Rampello L. L-acetylcarnitine attenuates the age-dependent decrease of NMDA-sensitive glutamate receptors in rat hippocampus. Acta Neurol 11:346-350, 1989.
[0096] Folstein M, Folstein S & McHugh PR. Mini-mental state: A practical method for grading the cognitive state of patients for the clinician. JPsychiatr Res 12:189-198, 1975.
[0097] Frahm J, Bruhn H, Gyngell ML, Merboldt KD, Hanicke W & Sauter
R. Localized proton NMR spectroscopy in different regions of the human brain in vivo. Relaxation times and concentrations of cerebral metabolites. Magn Reson Med 11:47-63, 1989.
[0098] Frasure-Smith N, Lesperance F & Talajic. Depression following myocardial infarction. JAMA 270:1819-1825, 1993.
[0099] Frasure-Smith N, Lesperance F & Talajic M. Depression and 18-month prognosis after myocardial infarction. Circulation 91:999-1005, 1995. [00100] Fritz IB. Carnitine and its role in fatty acid metabolism. Adv Lipid Res
1:285-333, 1963.
[00101] Fulgente T, Onofrj M, Del Re ML, Ferracci F, Bazzano S, Ghilardi MF
& Malatesta G. Laevo-acetylcarnitine (NicetileR) treatment of senile depression. Clin Tri 727:155-163, 1990.
[00102] Gadaleta MN, Petruzzella V, Renis M, Fracasso F & Cantatore P.
Reduced transcription of mitochondrial DNA in the senescent rat. Tissue dependence and effect of L-carnitine. Eur J Biochem 187:501-506, 1990.
[00103] Garzya G, Corallo D, Fiore A, Lecciso G, Petrelli G & Zotti C.
Evaluation of the effects of L-acetylcarnitine on senile patients suffering from depression. Drugs Exptl CHn Res 16:101-106, 1990.
[00104] Gecele M, Francesetti G & Meluzzi A. Acetyl-L-carnitine in aged subjects with major depression: Clinical efficacy and effects on the circadian rhythm of Cortisol. Dementia 2:333-337, 1991.
[00105] Geddes JW, Panchalingam K, Keller JN and Pettegrew JW (1997) Elevated phosphocholine and phosphatidyl choline following rat entorhinal cortex lesions. Neurobiol. Aging 18, 305-308.
[00106] Geriatric Pyschiatry Allicance. Diagnosis and treatment of late-life depression: making a difference. Monograph produced through a grant from Pfizer, Inc., 1996.
[00107] Ghirardi O., Caprioli, O., Ramacci, M. T. and Angelucci, L., Effect of long-term Acetyl-L-carnitine on stress-induced analygesia in the aging rat. Exp Gerontol 29:569-51 A, 1994.
[00108] Glonek T, Kopp SJ, Kot E, Pettegrew JW and Cohen MM (1982a) P- 31 nuclear magnetic resonance analysis of brain. The perchloric acid extract spectrum. Trans. Am. Soc. Neurochem. 13, 143.
[00109] Glonek T, Kopp SJ, Kot E, Pettegrew JW, Harrison WH and Cohen MM (1982b) P-31 nuclear magnetic resonance analysis of brain: The perchloric acid extract spectrum. J. Neurochem. 39, 1210-1219. [00110] Gonzalez-Mendez R, Litt L, Koretsky AP, von Colditz J, Weiner MW
& James TL. Comparison Of31P NMR spectra of in vivo rat brain using convolution difference and saturation with a surface coil. Source of the broad component in the brain spectrum. JMagn Reson 57:526-533, 1984.
[00111] Goodwin FK & Jamison ICR. Manic Depressive Illness, New York,
NY, Oxford University Press, 1990.
[00112] Grunze H, Kasper S, Goodwin G, et al., World federation of societies of biological psychiatry (WFSBP) guidelines for biological treatment of bipolar disorder, part 1 : treatment of bipolar depression. World J. Biol. Pschiatry, 3 : 115- 124, 2002.
[00113] Harris GJ, Barta PE, Peng LW, Lee S, Brettschneider PD, Shah A,
Henderer JD, Schlaepfer TE & Pearlson GD. MR volume segmentation of gray matter and white matter using manual thresholding: Dependence on image brightness. AJNR 15:225-230, 1994.
[00114] Harris GJ, Rhew EH, Noga T & Pearlson GD. User-friendly method for rapid brain and CSF volume calculation using transaxial MRI images. Psychiatry Res Neuroimaging 40:61-68, 1991.
[00115] Haselgrove JC, Subramanian JH, Christen R & Leigh PN. Analysis of in vivo NMR spectra. Rev Magn Reson Med 2:167-222, 1987.
[00116] Henry C, Sorbara F, Lacoste J, Gindre C and Leboyer M (2001) Antidepressant-induced mania in bipolar patients: identification of risk factors, [see comment]. J. Clin. Psychiatry 62, 249-255.
[00117] Herschfeld RMA, Bowden CL, Gitlin MJ, et al., Practice guideline for the treatment of patients with bipolar disorder (revision). Am. J. Psychiatry, 59:1-50, 2002.
[00118] Husain MM, McDonald WM, Doraiswamy PM, Figiel GS, Na C,
Escalona PR, Boyko OB, Nemeroff CB & Krishnan KRR. A magnetic resonance imaging study of putamen nuclei in major depression. Psychiatiy Res 40:95-99, 1991. [00119] Imura H, Naki Y & Yoshimi T. Effects of 5-hydroxytryptophan (5-
HTP) on growth hormone and ACTH release in man. J Clin Endocrinol Metab 36:204-206, 1973.
[00120] International Conference. Draft consensus guideline: Statistical principles for clinical trials. International conference on harmonisation of technical requirements for registration of pharmaceuticals for human use, ICH Steering Committee, 1997.
[00121] Janowsky DS, Risch SC, Judd LL & et al. Cholinergic supersensitivity in affective disorder patients: Behavioral and neuroendocrine observations. Psychopharmacol Bull 17:129-132, 1981.
[00122] Joffe RT, MacQueen GM, Marriott M, Robb J, Begin H and Young LT
(2002) Induction of mania and cycle acceleration in bipolar disorder: effect of different classes of antidepressant. Acta Psychiatr. Scand. 105, 427-430.
[00123] Kanfer JN, Pettegrew JW, Moossy J and McCartney DG (1993) Alterations of selected enzymes of phospholipid metabolism in Alzheimer's disease brain tissue as compared to non-Alzheimer's disease controls. Neurochem. Res. 18, 331-334.
[00124] Kato T, Takahashi S, Shioiri T & Inubushi T. Brain phosphorus metabolism in depressive disorders detected by phosphorus-31 magnetic resonance spectroscopy. J Affective Disord 26 . -223-230, 1992.
[00125] Keshavan MS, Anderson S, Beckwith C, Nash K, Pettegrew J &
Krishnan KRR. A comparison of stereology and segmentation techniques for volumetric measurements of brain ventricles. Psychiatry Res Neuroimaging 61:53- 60, 1995.
[00126] Keshavan MS, Beckwith C, Bagwell W, Pettegrew JW & Krishnan
KRR. An objective method for edge detection in MRI morphometry. Eur Psychiatiy 9:205-207, 1994.
[00127] Keshavan MS, Pettegrew JW, Panchalingam K, Kaplan D and Bozik E
(1991) Phosphorus 31 magnetic resonance spectroscopy detects altered brain metabolism before onset of schizophrenia. Arch. Gen. Psychiatry 48, 1112-1113. [00128] Keshavan MS, Stanley JA, Montrose DM, Minshew NJ and Pettegrew
JW (2003) Prefrontal membrane phospholipid metabolism of child and adolescent offspring at risk for schizophrenia or schizoaffective disorder: an in vivo 3 IP MRS study. Molecular Psychiatry 8, 316-323.
[00129] Kilby PM, Bolas NM & Radda GK. 3 IP-NMR study of brain phospholipid structures in vivo. Biochim Biophys Acta 1085:257-264, 1991.
[00130] Klunlc WE, Xu CJ, McClure RJ, Panchalingam K, Stanley JA &
Pettegrew JW. Aggregation of beta-amyloid peptide is promoted by membrane phospholipid metabolites elevated in Alzheimer's disease brain. JNeurochem 97:266- 272, 1997.
[00131] Klunk WE, Panchalingam K, McClure RJ, Stanley JA and Pettegrew
JW (1998) Metabolic alterations in postmortem Alzheimer's disease brain are exaggerated by Apo-E4. Neurobiol. Aging 19, 511-515.
[00132] Klunk WE, Xu C, Panchalingam K, McClure RJ and Pettegrew JW
(1996) Quantitative 1H and 31P MRS of PCA extracts of postmortem Alzheimer's disease brain. Neurobiol. Aging 17, 349-357.
[00133] Kohjimoto Y, Ogawa T, Matsumoto M, Shirakawa K, Kuwaki T,
Yasuda H, Anami K, Fujii T, Satoh H & Ono T. Effects of acetyl-L-carnitine on the brain lipofuscin content and emotional behavior in aged rats. Japanese J Pharmacology 48:365-371, 1988.
[00134] Kordon C, Hery M, Szafarcyk A, Ixart A & Assenmacher I. Serotonin and the regulation of neuroendocrine rhythms. J Physiol 77:489-496, 1981.
[00135] Krieger D. Factors influencing the circadian periodicity of ACTH and corticosteriods. Med Clin North Am 62:87 '-91, 1978.
[00136] Krishnan KR, McDonald WM, Doraiswamy PM, Tupler LA, Husain
M, Boyko OB, Figiel GS & Ellinwood EH, Jr. Neuroanatomical substrates of depression in the elderly. Eur Arch Psychiatry Clin Neurosci 243:41-46, 1993.
[00137] Krishnan KRR. Neuroanatomic substrates of depression in the elderly.
J Geriatric Psychiatry Neurol 6:39-58, 1993. [00138] Lebowitz BD, Pearson JL, Schneider LS, Reynolds CF, Alexopoulos
GS, Bruce ML, Conwell Y, Katz IR, Meyers BS, Morrison MF, Mossey JF, Neiderehe g & Parmelee PA. Diagnosis and treatment of depression in late-life: Consensus statement update. JAMA 278:1186-1190, 1997.
[00139] Leibiwitz SF, Weiss GF, Walsh UA & Viswanath D. Medial hypotalamic serotonin: Role in circadian patterns of feeding and macronutrient selection. Brain Res 503:132-140, 1989.
[00140] Lim KO, Pauly J, Webb P, Hurd R & Macovski A. Short TE phosphorus spectroscopy using a spin-echo pulse. Magn Reson Med 32:98-103, 1994.
[00141] Little JT, Reynolds CF, Dew MA, Frank E, Begley AE, Miller MD,
Cornes CL, Mazumdar S, Perel JM & Kupfer DJ. How common is treatment-resistant geriatric depression. Am J Psychiatry) (under editorial review) 1998.
[00142] Liu Y, Rosenthal RE, Stark-Reed P & Fiskum G. Inhibition of postcardiac arrest brain protein oxidation by acetyl-L-carnitine. Free Radical Biol Med 15:667-670, 1993.
[00143] Luyten PR, Bruntink G, Sloff FM, Vermeulen JWAH, van der Heij den
JI, den Hollander JA & Heerschap A. Broadband proton decoupling in human 31P NMR spectroscopy. NMR in Biomedicine 1:177-183, 1989.
[00144] Manfridi A, Forloni GL, Arrigoni-Martelli E & Mancia M. Culture of dorsal root ganglion neurons from aged rats: effects of acetyl-L-carnitine and NGF. Int J Develop Neurosci 10:321-329, 1992.
[00145] Mason RP, Trumbore MW & Pettegrew JW. Membrane interactions of a phosphomonoester elevated early in Alzheimer's disease. Neurobiol Aging 16:531- 539, 1995.
[00146] Mayberg HS, Lewis PJ, Regenold W & Wagner HN. Paralimbic hypoperfusion in unipolar depression. JNucl Med 35:929-934, 1994.
[00147] Mcllwain H & Bachelard HS. Biochemistry and the central nervous system. 5th edition, Edinburgh: Churchill Livingstone, 1985, p. 42. [00148] McNamara R, Arias-Mendoza F & Brown TR. Investigation of broad resonances in 31P NMR spectra of the human brain in vivo. NMR Biomedicine 7:237- 242, 1994.
[00149] Meltzer HY, Wiita B, Tricou BJ, Simonovic M & Fang VS. Effects of serotonin precursors and serotonin agonists on plasma hormone levels. Adv Biochem Psychopharmacol 34:117-140, 1982.
[00150] Merboldt KD, Chien D, Hanicke W, Gyngell ML, Bruhn H & Frahm J.
Localized 31P NMR spectroscopy of the adult human brain in vivo using stimulated- echo (STEAM) sequences. JMagn Reson 89:343-361, 1990.
[00151] Meyers B. Psychiatric intervention to improve primary care diagnosis and treatment of depression. Am J Geriatric Psychiatry 4:S91-S95, 1996.
[00152] Michaelis T, Merboldt KD, Bruhn H & Frahm J. Absolute concentrations of metabolites in the adult human brain in vivo: Quantification of localized proton NMR spectra. Radiology 187:219-227, 1993.
[00153] Miller BL, Moats RA, Shonk T, Ernst T, Woolley S & Ross BD.
Alzheimer's disease: Depiction of increased cerebral myo-inositol with proton MR spectroscopy. Radiology 187:433-437, 1993.
[00154] Moore CM, Christensen JD, Lafer B, Fava M & Renshaw PF. Lower levels of nucleoside triphosphate in the basal ganglia of depressed subjects: A phosphorous-31 magnetic resonance spectroscopy study. Am J Psychiatry 154:1 lol l 8, 1997a.
[00155] Moore CM & Renshaw PF. Magnetic resonance spectroscopy studies of affective disorders. In: Brain Imaging in Clinical Psychiatry, edited by KRR Krishnan & PM Doraiswamy. New York: Marcel Dekker, 1997b, p. 185-213.
[00156] Morley BJ & Murrin LC. AF64 depletes hypothalamic high affinity choline uptake and disrupts the circadian rhythm of locomotor activity without altering the density of nicotinic acetylcholine receptors. Brain Res 504:238-246, 1989. [00157] Mueller EE, Nistico G & Scapagnini U. Brain neurotransmitters and the regulation of anterior pituitary function. In: Neuroti-ansmitters and Anterior Pituitary Function, edited by EE Mueller, G Nistico & U Scapagnini. New York: Academic Press, 1977.
[00158] Murphy DL, Campbell I & Costa JL. Current studies of the indoleamine hypothesis of the affective disorders. In: Psychopharmacolgy: A Generation of Progress, edited by MA Lipton, A DiMascio & KF Killam. New York: Raven Press, 1978, p. 1235-1248.
[00159] Murphy EJ, Bates TE, Williams SR, Watson T, Brindle KM,
Rajagopalan B & Radda GK. Endoplasmic reticulum: The major contributor to the PDE peak in hepatic 31P-NMR spectra at low magnetic field strengths. Biochim Biophys Acta 1111:51-58, 1992.
[00160] Murphy EJ, Rajagopalan B, Brindle KM & Radda GK. Phospholipid bilayer contribution to 31P NMR spectra in vivo. Magn Reson Med 12:282-289, 1989.
[00161] Murray CJL & Lopez AD (editors). The Global Burden of Disease,
Cambridge, MA, Harvard University Press, 1996.
[00162] Nappi G & et al. Acetyl-L-carnitine normalizes pituitary- adrenocortical hyperactivity in pathological ageing brain. Med Sci Res 16:291-292, 1988.
[00163] Nardini M, Bonelli G, Iannuccelli M, Calvani M, Magnani N &
Mancuso M. Assessment of L-acetylcarnitine efficacy against fluoxetine in the depressive syndrome. In preparation, 1998.
[00164] Nasca D, Zurria G & Aguglia E. Action of acetyl-L-carnitine in association with mianserine on depressed old people. New Trends Clin Neuropharmacology/ 3:225-230, 1989.
[00165] Oxman TE, Barrett JE, Barrett J & Gerber P. Symptomatology of late- life minor depression among primary care patients. Psychosomatics 31:174- 180, 1990. [00166] Paradies G, Ruggiero FM, Gadaleta MN & Quagliariello E. The effect of aging and acetyl-L-carnitine on the activity of the phosphate carrier and on the phospholipid composition in rat hear mitochondria. Biochim Biophys Acta 1103:324- 326, 1992.
[00167] Paradies G, Ruggiero FM, Petrosillo G, Gadaleta MN & Quagliariello
E. Effect of aging and acetyl-L-carnitine on the activity of cytochrome oxidase and adenine nucleotide translocase in rat heart mitochondria. FEBS Letters 350:213-215, 1994.
[00168] Paradies G, Ruggiero FM, Petrosillo G, Gadaleta MN & Quagliariello
E. Carnitine-acylcarnitine translocase activity in cardiac mitochondria from aged rats: the effect of acetyl-L-carnitine. Mechanisms of Ageing & Development 84: 103-112, 1995.
[00169] Petroff OAC, Prichard JW, Behar KL, Alger JR, den Hollander JA &
Shulman RG. Cerebral intracellular pH by 31P nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy. Neurology 35:781-788, 1985.
[00170] Pettegrew JW, Glonek T, Baskin F and Rosenberg RN (1978) Phosphorus-31-31 NMR of neuroblastoma clonal lines. Effect of cell cycle stage and dibutyryl cyclic AMP. Proc. 14th Midwest Regional Am. Chem. Soc. 45.
[00171] Pettegrew JW, Glonek T, Baskin F and Rosenberg RN (1979a)
Phosphorus-31 NMR of neuroblastoma clonal lines: effect of cell confluency state and dibutyryl cyclic AMP. Neurochem. Res. 4, 795-801.
[00172] Pettegrew JW, Keshavan MS, Panchalingam K, Strychor S, Kaplan
DB, Tretta MG and Allen M (1991) Alterations in brain high-energy phosphate and membrane phospholipid metabolism in first-episode, drug-naive schizophrenics. A pilot study of the dorsal prefrontal cortex by in vivo phosphorus 31 nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy. Arch. Gen. Psychiatry 48, 563-568.
[00173] Pettegrew JW, Klunk WE, Kanal E, Panchalingam K and McClure RJ (1995) Changes in brain membrane phospholipid and high-energy phosphate metabolism precede dementia. Neurobiol. Aging 16, 973-975. [00174] Pettegrew JW, Kopp SJ, Dadok J, Minshew NJ, Feliksik JM, Glonek T and Cohen MM (1986) Chemical characterization of a prominent phosphomonoester resonance from mammalian brain: 31P and 1H NMR analysis at 4.7 and 14.1 tesla. J. Magn. Reson. 67, 443-450.
[00175] Pettegrew JW, Kopp SJ, Minshew NJ, Glonek T, Feliksik JM, Tow JP and Cohen MM (1987a) 31P nuclear magnetic resonance studies of phosphoglyceride metabolism in developing and degenerating brain: Preliminary observations. J. Neuropathol. Exp. Neurol. 46, 419-430.
[00176] Pettegrew JW, Levine J, Gershon S, Stanley JA, Servan-Schreiber D, Panchalingam K and McClure RJ (2002) 31P-MRS study of acetyl-L-carnitine treatment in geriatric depression: preliminary results. Bipolar Disorder's 4, 61-66.
[00177] Pettegrew JW and Minshew NJ (1981) Effects of short chain fatty acids on cellular membranes and energy metabolism: A nuclear magnetic resonance study. Neurology 31, 143.
[00178] Pettegrew JW, Minshew NJ, Glonek T, Kopp SJ and Cohen MM (1982a) Phosphorus NMR study of gerbil stroke model. Neurology 32, 196.
[00179] Pettegrew JW, Minshew NJ, Spiker D, McClure RJ and Klunk WE (1993a) Membrane alterations in erythrocytes of affective illness patients. Biol. Psychiatry 33, 47A.
[00180] Pettegrew JW, Minshew NJ, Spiker D, Tretta M, Strychor S, McKeag D, Munez LR, Miller GM, Carbone D and McClure RJ (1993b) Alterations in membrane molecular dynamics in erythrocytes of patients with affective illness. Depression 1, 88-100.
[00181] Pettegrew JW, Minshew NJ and Stewart RM (1981a) Dynamic membrane studies in individuals at risk for Huntington's disease. Neurology 31, 151.
[00182] Pettegrew JW, Moossy J, Withers G, McKeag D and Panchalingam K (1988a) 31P Nuclear Magnetic Resonance study of the brain in Alzheimer's disease. J. Neuropathol. Exp. Neurol. 47, 235-248. [00183] Pettegrew JW, Nichols JS, Minshew NJ, Rush AJ and Stewart RM (1982b) Membrane biophysical studies of lymphocytes and erythrocytes in manic- depressive illness. J. Affective Disord. 4, 237-247.
[00184] Pettegrew JW, Nichols JS and Stewart RM (1979b) Fluorescence spectroscopy on Huntington's fibroblasts. J. Neurochem. 33, 905-911.
[00185] Pettegrew JW, Nichols JS and Stewart RM (1979c) Fluorescence studies of fibroblasts, lymphocytes, and erythrocytes in Huntington's disease. Ann. Neurol. 6, 164.
[00186] Pettegrew JW, Nichols JS and Stewart RM (1980a) Membrane biophysical studies in manic-depressive intact peripheral tissues. Neurology 30, 375.
[00187] Pettegrew JW, Nichols JS and Stewart RM (1980b) Membrane studies in Huntington's disease: steady-state fluorescence studies of intact erythrocytes. Ann. Neurol. 8, 381-386.
[00188] Pettegrew JW, Nichols JS and Stewart RM (198 Ib) Membrane studies in Huntington's disease: Steady-state and time-dependent fluorescence spectroscopy of intact lymphocytes. J. Neurochem. 36, 1966-1976.
[00189] Pettegrew JW, Panchalingam K, Hamilton RL and McClure RJ (2001) Brain membrane phospholipid alterations in Alzheimer's disease. Neurochem. Res. 26, 771-782.
[00190] Pettegrew JW, Panchalingam K, Klunk WE, McClure RJ and Muenz LR (1994) Alterations of cerebral metabolism in probable Alzheimer's disease: A preliminary study. Neurobiol. Aging 15, 117-132.
[00191] Pettegrew JW, Panchalingam K, Moossy J, Martinez J, Rao G and Boiler F (1988b) Correlation of phosphorus-31 magnetic resonance spectroscopy and morphologic findings in Alzheimer's disease. Arch. Neurol. 45, 1093-1096.
[00192] Pettegrew JW, Panchalingam K, Spiker D, Minshew N, McKeag D, Strychor S and Tretta M (1998) Membrane molecular dynamics in affective illness. Soc. Biol. Psychiatiγ,43rd Annual Sci. Program 364. [00193] Pettegrew JW, Panchalingam K, Withers G, McKeag D and Strychor S (1990a) Changes in brain energy and phospholipid metabolism during development and aging in the Fischer 344 rat. J. Neuropathol. Exp. Neurol. 49, 237-249.
[00194] Pettegrew JW, Short JW, Woessner RD, Strychor S, McKeag DW, Armstrong J, Minshew NJ and Rush AJ (1987b) The effect of lithium on the membrane molecular dynamics of normal human erythrocytes. Biol. Psychiatry 22, 857-871.
[00195] Pettegrew JW, Strychor S, Tretta M and McKeag D (1990b) Membrane molecular alterations in Alzheimer's erythrocytes. Neurology 40 (Suppl. 1), 404.
[00196] Pettegrew JW, Strychor S, Tretta M and McKeag D (1990c) Membrane molecular alterations in Alzheimer's erythrocytes (abstract). Neurology 40 (Suppl. 1), 404.
[00197] Pettegrew JW, Klunk WE, Panchalingam K, Kanfer JN & McClure RJ.
Clinical and neurochemical effects of acetyl-L-carnitine in Alzheimer's disease. Neurohiol Aging 16:1-4, 1995.
[00198] Pettegrew JW, McClure RJ, Keshavan MS, Minshew NJ,
Panchalingam K & Klunk WE. 31P magnetic resonance spectroscopy studies of developing brain. In: Neurodevelopement & Adult Psychopathology, edited by MS Keshavan & RM Murray. Cambridge University Press, 1997, p. 71-92.
[00199] Pettegrew JW, Withers G, Panchalingam K & Post JF. Considerations for brain pH assessment by 31P NMR. Magn Reson Imaging 6: 135-142, 1988.
[00200] Pettegrew JW, Levine J, and McClure RJ.Acetyl-L-carnitine physical- chemical, metabolic, and therapeutic properties: Relevance for its mode of action in Alzheimer's disease and geriatric depression. Molecular Psychiatry 5, 616-632, 2000.
[00201] Pfefferbaum A, Lim KO, Rosenbloom M & Zipursky RB. Brain magnetic resonance imaging: Approaches for investigating schizophrenia. Schizophr Bull 16:453-476, 1990. [00202] Piovesan P, Pacifici L, Taglialatela G, Ramacci MT & Angelucci L.
Acetyl-L-carnitine treatment increases choline acetyltransferase activity and NGF levels in the CNS of adult rats following total fimbria-fornix transection. Brain Res 633:77-82, 1994.
[00203] Piovesan P, Quatrini G, Pacifici L, Taglialatela G & Angelucci L.
Acetyl-L-carnitine restores choline acetyltransferase activity in the hippocampus of rats with partial unilateral fimbria-fornix transection. International Journal of Developmental Neuroscience 13: 13-19, 1995.
[00204] Prickaerts J, Blokland A, Honig W, Meng F & Jolles J. Spatial discrimination learning and choline acetyltransferase activity in streptozotocin-treated rats: effects of chronic treatment with acetyl-L-carnitine. Brain Res 674:142-146, 1995.
[00205] Provencher SW. Estimation of metabolite concentrations from localized in vivo proton NMR spectra. Magn Reson Med 30:672-679, 1993.
[00206] Rabins PV, Pearlson GD & Aylward E. Cortical magnetic resonance imaging changes in elderly inpatients with major depression. Am J Psychiatry 148:617-620, 1991.
[00207] Ramasubbu R (2001) Dose-response relationship of selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors treatment-emergent hypomania in depressive disorders. Acta Psychiatr. Scand. 104, 236-238.
[00208] Rao KV, Mawal YR & Qureshi IA. Progressive decrease of cerebral cytochrome C oxidase activity in sparse-fur mice: role of acetyl-L-carnitine in restoring the ammonia-induced cerebral energy depletion. Neurosci Lett 224:83-86, 1997.
[00209] Rasband W. NIH Image Manual. Bethesda, Maryland: National
Institutes of Health, 1993.
[00210] Reynolds CF, Frank E, Kupfer DJ, Thase ME, Perel JM, Mazumdar S
& Houck PR. Treatment outcome in recurrent major depression: A post-hoc comparison of elderly ("young old") and mid-life patients. Am J Psychiatry 153:1288-1292, 1996. [00211] Reynolds CF, Frank E, Perel J, Mazumdar S & Kupfer DJ.
Maintenance therapies for late-life recurrent major depression: Research and review circa 1995. International Psychogeriatrics 1:21 '-40, 1995.
[00212] Reynolds CF, Nowell PD, Hoch CC, Neylan TC, Buysse DJ & Kupfer
DJ. Diagnosis and treatment of insomnia in the elderly. In: Clinical Geriatric Psychopharmacology, edited by C Salzman. 1997,
[00213] Ricci A, Ramacci MT, Ghirardi O & Amenta F. Age-related changes of the mossy fibre system in rat hippocampus: effect of long term acetyl-L-carnitine treatment. Arch Gerontol Geriatrics 8:63-71, 1989.
[00214] Risch SC, Kalin NH & Janowsky DS. Cholinergic challenges, behavioral and neuroendocrine correlates. J Clin Psychopharmacol 1:186-192, 1981.
[00215] Rosenberg DR, Keshavan MS, Dick EL, Bagwell WW, McMaster F,
Seymour AB & Birmaher AB. Quantitative morphology of the corpus callosum in pediatric obsessive compulsive disorder. Prog Neuropsychopharmacology Biol Psychiatry, in press, 1997.
[00216] Rosenthal RE, Williams R, Bogaert YE, Getson PR & Fiskum G.
Prevention of postischemic canine neurological injury through potentiation of brain energy metabolism by acetyl-L-carnitine. Stroke 23: 1312-1318, 1992.
[00217] Rovner BW. Depression and increased risk of mortality in the nursing home patient. Am J Med 94Λ9S-22S, 1993.
[00218] Ruggiero FM, Cafagna F, Gadaleta MN & Quagliariello E. Effect of aging and acetyl-L-carnitine on the lipid composition of rat plasma and erythrocytes. Biochem Biophys Res Commun 170:621-626, 1990.
[00219] Sachs GS, Printz DJ, Kahn DA, Carpenter D, & Docherty JP. The
Expert Consensus Guideline Series: Medication Treatment of Bipolar Disorder, Postgraduate Med. April, Spec: 1-104, 2000.
[00220] Sass RL & Wemess P. Acetylcarnitine on the relationship between structure and function. Biochem Biophys Res Commun 55:736-742, 1973. [00221] Schlegel S, Aldenhoff JB, Eissner D, Linder P & Nickel O. Regional cerebral blood flow in depression: Associations with psychopathology. J Affective Disord 17:211-218, 1989.
[00222] Seelig J. 3 IP nuclear magnetic resonance and the head group structure of phospholipids in membranes. Biochim Biopkys Acta 515:105-140, 1978.
[00223] Sershen H, Harsing LJ, Banay-Schwartz M, Hashim A, Ramacci MT
& Lajtha A. Effect of acetyl-L-carnitine on the dopaminergic system in aging brain. J Neurosci Res 30:555-559, 1991.
[00224] Singh I, Xu C, Pettegrew JW and Kanfer JN (1994) Endogenous inhibitors of human choline acetyltransferase present in Alzheimer's brain: Preliminary observation. Neurobiol. Aging 15, 643-649.
[00225] Smith ICP & Ekiel IH. Phosphorus-31 NMR of Phospholipids in
Membranes. In: Phosphorus-31 NMR: Principles and Applications, Academic Press, 1984, p. 447-474.
[00226] Stanley JA, Drost DJ, Williamson PC & Thompson RT. The use of a priori knowledge to quantify short echo in vivo 1H MR spectra. Magn Reson Med 34: 17-24, 1995.
[00227] Stanley JA, Panchalingam K, Miller G, McClure RJ & Pettegrew JW.
A new method to quantify the broad component under the phosphodiester resonance and its application to study first-episode never medicated schizophrenics [abstract]. Proceedings of the 5th Annual meeting of the International Society of Magnetic Resonance in Medicine SMR, Berkeley CA: 1408, 1997.
[00228] Stanley JA, Williamson PC, Drost DJ, Carr T, Tylett J & Merskey H.
T Thhee ssttudy of schizophrenia via in vivo 31? and 1H MRS. Schizophr Bull 9:210-210,
1993.
[00229] Stanley JA, Williamson PC, Drost DJ, Carr TJ, Rylett RJ, Morrison-
Stewart S & Thompson RT. Membrane phospholipid metabolism and schizophrenia: An in vivo 31P-MR spectroscopy study. Schizophr Res 13:209-215, 1994. [00230] Stanley M & Mann JJ, Increased serotonin: 2-binding sites in frontal cortex of suicide victims. Lancet i:214-216, 1983.
[00231] Stark P & Hardison CD. A review of multicentre controlled studies of fluoxetine vs imipramine and placebo in our patients with major depressive disorder. J Clin Psychiatry 46:26-31 , 1985.
[00232] Stevens MJ, Lattimer SA, Feldman EL, Helton ED, Millington DS,
Sima AA & Greene DA. Acetyl-L-carnitine deficiency as a cause of altered nerve myo-inositol content, Na,K-ATPase activity, and motor conduction velocity in the streptozotocin-diabetic rat. Metabolism: Clinical & Experimental 45:865-872, 1996.
[00233] Sweet RA, Panchalingam K, Pettegrew JW, McClure RJ, Hamilton
RL, Lopez OL, Kaufer DI, DeKosky ST and Klunk WE (2002) Psychosis in Alzheimer disease: postmortem magnetic resonance spectroscopy evidence of excess neuronal and membrane phospholipid pathology. Neurobiol. Aging 23, 547-553.
[00234] Szanto K, Prigerson HG, Houck PR & Reynolds CF. Suicidal ideation in elderly bereaved: The role of complicated grief. Suicide and Life-Threatening Behavior 27:194-207, 1997.
[00235] Taglialatela G, Angelucci L, Ramacci MT, Werrbach-Perez K, Jackson
GR & Perez-Polo JR. Acetyl-L-carnitine enhances the response of PC 12 cells to nerve growth factor. Brain Res Develop Brain Res 59:221-230, 1991.
[00236] Taglialatela G, Angelucci L, Ramacci MT, Werrbach-Perez K, Jackson
GR & Perez-Polo JR. Stimulation of nerve growth factor receptors in PC 12 by acetyl- L-carnitine. Biochem Pharmacol 44:577-585, 1992.
[00237] Taglialatela G, Navarra D, Cruciani R, Ramacci MT, Alema GS &
Angrist B. Acetyl-L-carnitine treatment increases nerve growth factor levels and choline acetyltransferase activity in the central nervous system of aged rats. Exp Gerontol 29:55-66, 1994.
[00238] Talairach J & Tournoux P. Co-planar Stereotaxic Atlas of the Human
Brain. New York: Thieme Medical Publishers, 1988. [00239] Tamada RS, Issler CK, Amaral JA, Sachs GS and Lafer B (2004) Treatment emergent affective switch: a controlled study. Bipolar Disorders 6, 333- 337.
[00240] Tempesta E, Casella L, Pirrongelli C, Janiri L, Calvani M & Ancona L.
L-acetlycarnitine in depressed elderly subjects. A cross-over study vs placebo. Drugs Under Experimental Clin Res 13:417-423, 1987.
[00241] Tempesta E, Janiri L & Pirrongelli C. Stereospecifϊc effects of acetylcarnitine on the spontaneous activity of brain-stem neurons and their responses to acetylcholine and serotonin. Neuropharmacology 24:43-50, 1985.
[00242] Tempesta E, Janiri L & Salera P. The effects of microiontophoretically applied acetyl-L-carnitine on single neurons in the rats brain-stem. Neuropharmacology 21:111982.
[00243] Traskman L, Asberg M, Bertilsson L & Sjostrand L. Monoamine metabolites in CSF and suicidal behavior. Arch Gen Psychiatry 38:631-636, 1981.
[00244] Urenjak J, Williams SR, Gadian DG & Noble M. Specific expression of N-acetylaspartate in neurons, oligodendrocyte-type-2 astrocyte progenitors, and immature oligodendrocytes in vitro. JNeurochem 59:55-61, 1992.
[00245] van der Veen JW, de Beer R, Luyten PR & van Ormondt D. Accurate quantification of in vivo 31P NMR signals using the variable projection method and prior knowledge. Magn Reson Med 6:92-98, 1988.
[00246] Vance DE. Phospholipid metabolism and cell signalling in eucaryotes.
In: Biochemistry of lipids, lipoproteins and membranes, Volume 20, edited by DE Vance & J Vance. New York: Elsevier, 1991, p. 205-240.
[00247] Villa RF & Gorini A. Action of L-acetylcarnitine on different cerebral mitochondrial populations from hippocampus and striatum during aging. Neurochem Res 16:1125-1132, 1991.
[00248] Villa RF, Turpeenoja L, Benzi G & Giuffπda SM. Action of L- acetylcarnitine on age-dependent modifications of mitochondrial membrane proteins from rat cerebellum. Neurochem Res 13:909-916, 1988. [00249] Villardita C, Smirni P & Vecchio I. Acetyl-L-carnitine in depressed geriatric patients. Eur Rev Med Pharm Sci 6:1-12, 1983.
[00250] Wee BE & Turek FW. Carbachol phase shifts the circadian rhythm of locomotor activity in the jungarian hamster. Brain Res 505:209-214, 1989.
[00251] Most of the studies have been directed toward geriatric subjects. However, it is also desirable to use acetyl-L-carnitine (ALCAR) for non-geriatric human subjects as well as for adolescent human subjects.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
[00252] In accordance with preferred embodiments of the present invention, some of the problems presently associated with the diagnosis of alcoholism disease are overcome. A method and system for medical imaging of neuropsychiatric disorders including chronic alcoholism is presented.
[00253] The method allows cognitive impairment seen in some chronic alcoholism subjects to be determined. Regional molecular/metabolic alterations of phospholipid and ganglioside metabolism are determined which distinguish cognitively impaired and cognitively unimpaired chronic alcoholism subjects.
[00254] The foregoing and other features and advantages of preferred embodiments of the present invention will be more readily apparent from the following detailed description. The detailed description proceeds with references to the accompanying drawings.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[00255] Preferred embodiments of the present invention are described with reference to the following drawings, wherein:
[00256] FIG. IA is a graph showing the correlation of PCr levels from the prefrontal region with HDRS scores for both depressed patients (• subject #1; ♦ subject #2);
[00257] FIG. IB is a graph showing the correlation of PME(s-τc) levels from the prefrontal region with HDRS scores for both depressed patients (• subject #1; ♦ subject #2);
[00258] FIG. 2A is a graph showing PME(s-τc) and PCr levels in the a) prefrontal region of the two depressed patients (• subject #1; ♦ subject #2) and normal controls (O, n=6) at baseline and at 6 and 12 weeks follow up. The control values include mean+SD;
[00259] FIG. 2B is a graph showing PME(s-τc) and PCr levels in the basal ganglia region of the two depressed patients (• subject #1; ♦ subject #2) and normal controls (O, n=6) at baseline and at 6 and 12 weeks follow up. The control values include mean+SD;
[00260] FIG. 3A is a phosphorous magnetic resonance spectroscopic image showing the Z-scores of the two depressed subjects compared with controls at entry and 12 weeks for PME(s-τc) metabolite levels for those regions with significant differences. The intensity of the color is scaled to the z-score (mean difference/SD) given on the scale below the image. Z-scores for PME(s-τc) and PCr levels in the frontal region exceed 3.0 and 2.0, respectively;
[00261] FIG. 3B is a phosphorous magnetic resonance spectroscopic image showing the Z-scores of the two depressed subjects compared with controls at entry and 12 weeks for PCr metabolite levels for those regions with significant differences. The intensity of the color is scaled to the z-score (mean difference/SD) given on the scale below the image. Z-scores for PME(s-τc) and PCr levels in the frontal region exceed 2.0 and 2.0, respectively;
[00262] FIG. 4 is a block diagram illustrating an effect of ALCAR on in vitro 31P MRS α-GP and PCr levels under hypoxic (30 seconds) and normoxic conditions in Fischer 344 rats;
[00263] FIG. 5 is a block diagram illustrating an effect of ALCAR on in vitro 31P MRS phospholipid levels under hypoxic and normoxic conditions in Fischer 344 rats;
[00264] FIG. 6 is a block diagram illustrating a percent change of in vivo 31P MRSI metabolite levels and PME, PDE linewidths [full width at half maximum (fwhm)] of 2 MDD subjects compared with 13 control subjects;
[00265] FIG. 7 is a flow diagram illustrating a method for diagnosing chronic alcoholism in a human;
[00266] FIG. 8 is a block diagram of a phosphorous magnetic resonance spectroscopic image illustrating Chronic Alcoholism in Males Cognitively Impaired (N=4) vs Cognitively Unimpaired (N=5);
[00267] FIG. 9 is a block diagram of a phosphorous magnetic resonance spectroscopic image illustrating Correlations — MRS metabolites versus Neuropsychological Scores (N=9);
[00268] FIG. 10 is flow diagram illustrating a Method 46 for diagnosing chronic alcoholism in a human;
[00269] FIG. 11 is a block diagram of a phosphorous magnetic resonance spectroscopic image illustrating Chronic Schizophrenia (males): Cognitively Impaired (N=I 9) vs Cognitively Unimpaired (N=I 6); [00270] FIG. 12 is a block diagram of a phosphorous magnetic resonance spectroscopic image illustrating Correlations ~ MRS Metabolites vs. Neuropsychological Scores (N=35); and
[00271] FIG.13 is a block diagram 64 of a phosphorous magnetic resonance spectroscopic image illustrating Effects of Nicotine: Middle Age Smokers (N=8), Nicotine vs. Placebo Patch.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
[00272] Carnitines in general are compounds of including the chemical formula (1):
Figure imgf000043_0001
where R is hydrogen or an alkanoyl group with 2 to 8 carbon atoms, and X" represents the anion of a pharmaceutically acceptable salt.
[00273] The invention described herein includes both the administration of L- carnitine or an alkanoyl L-carnitine or one of its pharmacologically acceptable salts of formula (1) in the treatment of depression, and pharmaceutical compositions, which can be administered orally, parenterally or nasally, including controlled-release forms. Preferably, the alkanoyl L-carnitine is selected from the group consisting of acetyl-L- carnitine (hereinafter abbreviated to ALC or ALCAR), propionyl L-carnitine (hereinafter abbreviated to PLC), butyryl L-carnitine, valeryl L-carnitine and isovaleryl L-carnitine, or one of their pharmacologically acceptable salts. The ones preferred are acetyl L-carnitine, propionyl L-carnitine and butyryl L-carnitine. The most preferred is acetyl L-carnitine.
[00274] What is meant by a pharmacologically acceptable salt alkanoyl L-carnitine is any salt of the latter with an acid that does not give rise to toxic or side effects. These acids are well known to pharmacologists and to experts in pharmaceutical technology.
[00275] Examples of pharmacologically acceptable salts of L-carnitine or of the alkanoyl L-carnitines, though not exclusively these, are chloride; bromide; iodide; aspartate; acid aspartate; citrate; acid citrate; tartrate; acid tartrate; phosphate; acid phosphate; fumarate; acid fumarate; glycerophosphate; glucose phosphate; lactate; maleate; acid maleate; mucate; orotate, oxalate; acid oxalate; sulphate; acid sulphate; trichloroacetate; trifluoroacetate; methane sulphonate; pamoate and acid pamoate. [00276] As used herein, a geriatric subject is an individual sixty-five years of age or older. See The Merck Manual, 15th edition (1987) p. 2389. A non-geriatric subject is less than sixty-five years old but not an adolescent.
[00277] Adolescence is the transitional stage of development between childhood and full adulthood, representing the period of time during which a person is biologically adult but emotionally may not at full maturity. The ages which are considered to be part of adolescence vary by culture. In the United States, adolescence is generally considered to begin around age thirteen, and end around twenty-four. By contrast, the World Health Organization (WHO) defines adolescence as the period of life between around age ten and end around age twenty years of age. As used herein, an adolescent subject is at least ten years old and less than twenty-six years old.
[00278] Phosphorus magnetic resonance spectroscopic imaging (31P MRSI) analysis of two depressed elderly subjects treated with ALCAR for 12 weeks are compared with those of six normal non-demented, non-depressed subjects.
[00279] A twelve-week, open, clinical, 31P MRSI study design was used to examine the possible effects of ALCAR on brain metabolism and depressive symptomatology in non-demented geriatric major depressive disorder (NDG-MDD). Two depressed, non-demented [Folstein Mini-Mental State Exam (MMSE)>24)] male subjects, 70 and 80 years old, were compared with six age, social-economic status, and medically matched non-demented controls (all male, mean age of 73.6+3.6 years, range 69.7-78.2 years). The two elderly depressed subjects completed baseline Structural Clinical Interview of DSM-IV (SCID) I/P version 2.0, HDRS (17 item), MMSE, UKU Side Effect Rating Scale (UKU), and Cumulative Illness Rating Scale (CIRS) to assess medical burden, baseline physical, ECG, and, laboratory tests for hematology, urine analysis, immunopathology, and blood chemistry. Follow-up visits for the depressed subjects were done every other week for 12 weeks. Efficacy (psychiatric evaluation) was assessed by changes in the HDRS which was performed at baseline and every other week for 12 weeks along with secondary measures (MMSE; CIRS; and UKU), whereas the CIRS was performed at baseline, 6, and 12 weeks. Physical examinations and EKGs were performed at baseline, 6, and 12 weeks. The baseline MR evaluation was scheduled and completed prior to the administration of ALCAR. Follow-up MR evaluations were at 6 and 12 weeks. Acetyl-L-carnitine was administered in the form of oral tablets containing 590 mg of acetyl-L-carnitine hydrochloride (500 mg acetyl-L-carnitine). The dosage regimen was fixed at three grams of acetyl-L-carnitine given two tablets three times a day for 12 weeks.
[00280] 31P MRSI acquisition — A custom built, doubly tuned transmit/receive volume head coil was used to acquire the 1H MRI and 2D 31P MRSI data on a GE Signa 1.5 T whole body MR imager. First, sets of axial and sagittal scout MR images were collected. The 30 mm thick MRSI slice was positioned parallel with the anterior commisure-posterior commisure line to include the right and left prefrontal, basal ganglia, superior temporal, inferior parietal, occipital, and centrum semiovale regions. A self-refocused spin echo pulse sequence with an effective flip range of 60° and an echo time of 2.5 nis, was used to acquire the 31P MRSI (360 mm field of view, 30 mm slice thickness, 8x8 phase encoding steps [45x45x30 mm3 nominal voxel dimensions], 2 s TR, 1024 data points, 4.0 kHz spectral bandwidth and 16 NEX).
[00281] MRSI post-processing and quantification — To optimize the right and left voxel positions for the six regions, the 8x8 31P grid was shifted with respect to the anatomical MRI and a mild spatial apodization (i.e., Fermi window with 90% diameter and 5% transition width) was applied prior to the inverse Fourier transform. The remaining processing steps were 100% automated. A 5 Hz exponential apodization was applied and the PME, phosphodiester (PDE), PCr, α-, γ-, and β-ATP, and inorganic orthophosphate (Pi), were modeled in the time domain with exponentially damped sinusoids and by omitting the first 2.75 ms of the free induction decay (FID) using the Marquardt-Levenberg algorithm. This approach ensured that the PME and PDE resonances primarily reflected the freely mobile, short correlation time (s-τc), water soluble PME(s-τc) and PDE(s-τc) metabolites without the influence of relatively broad underlying signals within the PME and PDE spectral region. The PME(s-τc) (i.e., phosphoethanolamine, phosphocholine, and inositol- 1 -phosphate) are predominantly building blocks of phospholipids and therefore, the relative concentrations of these metabolites are a measure of the active synthesis of membranes; the PDE(s-τc) (i.e., glycerophosphocholine and glycerophosphoethanolamine) are major products of membrane degradation. To obtain intermediate correlation time (i-τc) components within the PME and PDE spectral region, the FIDs were modeled a second time but with omitting the first 0.75 ms of the FID and then taking the difference between the PME and PDE amplitudes of the two modeled results. PME(i-τc) moieties include less mobile molecules such as phosphorylated proteins and PMEs that are tightly coupled (in terms of MRS) to macromolecules [i.e., PMEs inserting into membrane phospholipids. PDE(i-τc) moieties include less mobile PDEs that are part of small membrane phospholipid structures such as micelles, synaptic vesicles, and transport/secretory vesicles and PDE moieties coupled to larger molecular structures (i.e., PDEs inserting into membrane phospholipid structures. The right/left side effect was eliminated by averaging the signal from the two voxels, prior to fitting (which included correcting for phase and resonance frequency). Additionally, metabolite levels are expressed as a mole % relative to the total 31 P signal.
[00282] The statistical analysis was done using the Statview (SAS Institute, Inc.) software package. The pearson t correlation test used to correlate between variables.
[00283] The two elderly depressed subjects were diagnosed with MDD according to DSM-IV criteria. No previous antidepressant medications were taken by the subjects in the three months prior to the study. Subject #1 has baseline, 6 and 12 week HDRS scores of 15, 1 and 0 and subject #2 had scores of 20, 17, and 3, respectively. Thus both depressed subjects were clinically improved at endpoint, fulfilling criteria for remission (HDRS<8). Medical conditions diagnosed in the depressed subjects included s/p knee arthroscopy, s/p cervical disk removal, hearing loss and benign prostatic hypertrophy in subject #1 and benign prostatic hypertrophy in subject #2. No clinically significant abnormalities were found in the laboratory exams and EKG of either depressed subject. Baseline, 6, and 12 weeks CIRS were 7, 6, and 5 for subject #1; and 4, 4, and 2 for subject #2, respectively. The change reflects the improvement of depressive symptomatology. Side effects from ALCAR treatment were mild and included dry mouth in subject #1 and a slight increase in perspiration in subject #2.
[00284] FIG. 1 shows the correlation of PME(s-τc) (r=0.86, p=0.069 and PCr (r=0.97, p=0.002) levels from the prefrontal region with HDRS scores for both depressed subjects.
[00285] FIG. 2 illustrates the prefrontal and basal ganglia PCr and PME(s-τc) levels at baseline, 6 and 12 weeks for the two depressed subjects and the mean PCr and PME(s-Tc) levels for the six normal controls.
[00286] Unfortunately, the 6 week 31P MRSI session for subject #1 produced poor quality, unacceptable data and this time point is missing from the graphs. Baseline prefrontal PME(s-τc) levels in the depressed subjects were 1.5 to 2.0 SD higher than the mean of the controls and this increase was normalized with ALCAR treatment. Both depressed subjects had prefrontal PCr levels one SD higher than the mean of controls and ALCAR treatment further increased PCr levels by 27% and 31%, respectively. Similar changes in PME(s-τc) and PCr levels also were observed in the basal ganglia region (FIG. 2), but these metabolite levels did not correlate with HDRS scores. Although the most marked changes occur in the prefrontal region, z- score plots of the significant PME(s-τc) and PCr changes between depressed subjects and controls illustrates the other brain regions also undergo changes with ALCAR treatment. FIG. 3 demonstrates that compared with normal subjects, the two untreated depressed subjects at baseline had increased levels of PME(s-τc) in the prefrontal region (p=0.006). After 12 weeks of ALCAR treatment, the PME(s-τc) are normalized in the prefrontal regions but elevated in the superior temporal regions (p=0.05. In addition, PCr levels are elevated in the prefrontal (p=0.001), basal ganglia (p=0.022), and occipital (p=0.027 regions after 12 weeks of ALCAR treatment. There were no significant changes in the other metabolite levels.
[00287] While not wishing to be bound by any particular theory, the above findings suggest that beneficial clinical effects of acetyl-L-carnitine appear to be associated with changes in brain prefrontal PME(s-τc) and PCr levels. In the prefrontal region,- the depressed subjects compared with controls after 12 weeks of ALCAR treatment show normalization of PME(s-τc) and elevation of PCr levels.
[00288] The PME(s-τc) resonance is predominantly composed of phosphocholine, phosphoethanolamine and inositol- 1 -phosphate which are precursors in membrane phospholipid metabolism. The increased PME(s-τc) in depression, as also observed by others is not fully understood and will require further study. ALCAR treatment seems to restore PME(s-τc) levels to normal and there was a trend for the decreasing PME levels to correlate with clinical improvement. In the prefrontal region, twelve weeks of ALCAR treatment also elevated PCr, a high-energy phosphate metabolite which is an immediate precursor of ATP.
[00289] Compared with the control group, similar findings were observed for basal ganglia PME(s-τc) and PCr levels, but the metabolite levels did not correlate with HDRS scores. This may be due to the small number of depressed patients analyzed. Other brain regions may be affected by depression and these changes may be altered by ALCAR treatment (FIG. 3).
ACETYL-L-CARNITINE (ALCAR) RESULTS
[00290] MDD is a major, world-wide health problem. There is a need for new treatment approaches that have a wide margin of safety and can speed the onset to remission and reduce the rate of recurrence in this major mental health problem. In addition, the molecular and metabolic factors that underlie MDD and contribute to the slow and variable treatment response are further identified. Since ALCAR has demonstrated beneficial effects on neurodegenerative processes as well as beneficial effects on energy metabolism, membrane structure/function/metabolism, and neurotrophic effects, it is used in treatement of MDD. Many of the metabolic and molecular processes in adolescent and non-geriatric subjects are altered by ALCAR and thus are amenable to ALCAR treatment.
[00291] ALCAR treatment decreases levels of phosphomonoesters (PME) and increases levels of phospocreatine (PCr) in a brain of an adolescent or non-geriatric human subject with depression or bi-polar depression. ALCAR also produces beneficial changes to membrane phospholipid and high-energy phosphate metabolism in a brain a brain of an adolescent or non-geriatric human subject with depression or bi-polar depression.
[00292] What is meant by a pharmacologically acceptable salt of ALCAR is any salt of the latter with an acid that does not give rise to toxic or side effects. These acids are well known to pharmacologists and to experts in pharmaceutical technology.
[00293] One preferred form of daily dosing of ALCAR for clinical use is a composition comprising an amount of an acetyl L-carnitine, preferably equivalent to 0.1 to 3 g, and preferably 0.5 to 3 g per day.
[00294] ALCAR does not appear to induce mania in animal models or in clinical trials to date. Since animal and basic science studies demonstrate that ALCAR shares several important molecular mechanisms with lithium, but without lithium's potential toxicity, ALCAR could provide prophylactic effects against suicidality. Given ALCAR' s similarity to lithium at several molecular mechanistic levels, ALCAR is effective in treating bipolar depression and preventing recurrent episodes. Long-term therapy of MDD with therapeutic agents that have molecular properties that slow or reverse neurodegenerative changes as well as behavioral changes is desirable. ALCAR is one such therapeutic agent. Few existing 31P and 1H MRSI studies of MDD provide findings for compounds which demonstrate both membrane phospholipid and high-energy phosphate changes in the brain of individuals with MDD. However, new studies with ALCAR demonstrate such changes (see below). Since ALCAR can interact with both cholinergic and serotonergic neurotransmitter systems, it will modulate neurobiological and psychobiological activities controlled by these two neurotransmitter systems. This partially explains ALCAR's antidepressant activity.
EFFECT OF ALCAR ON BRAIN METABOLIC RESPONSE TO BRIEF ENERGETIC STRESS
[00295] ALCAR has been shown to provide a protective effect in several animal models of brain energetic stress. ALCAR also has been shown to be an effective treatment of MDD which is associated with neurodegenerative and metabolic changes consistent with energetic stress.
[00296] FIG. 4 is a block diagram illustrating an effect of ALCAR on in vitro 31P MRS α-GP and PCr levels under hypoxic (30 seconds) and normoxic conditions in Fischer 344 rats.
[00297] FIG. 5 is a block diagram illustrating an effect of ALCAR on in vitro 31P MRS phospholipid levels under hypoxic and normoxic conditions in Fischer 344 rats.
[00298] The rat brain responds differentially to brief energetic stress (30 seconds of hypoxia) depending on the age of the animal. The effect of ALCAR (75 mg/kg animal weight injected intraperitoneally 1 hour before sacrificing the animal) on both normoxic rat brain and rat brain exposed to brief hypoxia (30 seconds) was investigated (FIGS, x and x). These studies were conducted on aged rats (30 months) to provide possible insights into human aged brain and MDD. While ALCAR under normoxic conditions (ALCAR/normoxia) did not alter α-GP levels, under ALCAR/hypoxia conditions, the α-GP levels were elevated higher (approximately +80% compared with controls, p = 0.01) than under 30 seconds of hypoxia alone (approximately +25% compared with controls, p = 0.06). Mirror-image findings were observed for PCr levels which decrease with hypoxia (non-significant), increase with ALCAR/normoxia (non-significant), and decrease with ALCAR/hypoxia (nonsignificant, p = 0.07)(FIG. 4).
[00299] The findings for brain phospholipids are particularly striking (FIG. 5) given the brevity of the hypoxia. Cardiolipin levels are increased (approx. +20%) after 30 seconds of hypoxia (p < 0.01), are unchanged with ALCAR/normoxia, and non-signifϊcantly reduced with ALCAR/hypoxia. Phosphatidylserine (PtdS) levels are unchanged with hypoxia but are decreased with both ALCAR/normoxia (approx. - 50%, p < 0.01) and ALCAR/hypoxic (approx. -75%, p < 0.01). [00300] These studies provide direct evidence for ALCAR effects on brain membrane phospholipid metabolism and the NADH/α-GP shuttle pathway under conditions of normoxia (PtdS, SPH) and brief hypoxia (α-GP, PtdS, SPH, Ptdl). These mechanisms are also important in human clinical conditions that involve brain aging and possible energetic stress such as MDD.
IN VIVO 31P MRS FINDINGS IN TWO YOUNG SUBJECTS WITH MDD
[00301] FIG. 6 is a block diagram illustrating a percent change of in vivo 31P MRSI metabolite levels and PME, PDE linewidths [full width at half maximum (fwhm)] of 2 MDD subjects compared with 13 control subjects.
[00302] As part of an ongoing 31P-1H MRSI study of never-medicated, first- episode schizophrenia subjects three 31P MRSI spectra on 2 MDD subjects (1 Asian male, 1 white female, 24V2.3 years) were obtained. The MDD spectral results are compared with those obtained from 13 controls (6 males; 3 white, 2 African- American, 1 Asian and 7 females; 4 white, 3 African-American; 21Vl.0 years). PME levels in the MDD subjects were increased by approximately 15% (p=0.13) while there were decreases in the levels of PDE (approx. -7%; p=0.08), PCr (approx. -5%, p=0.61), and β-ATP (approx. -3%, ρ=0.87) (FIG. 6). Treatment with ALCAR lowered PME levels in the MDD subjects. Of note is that the PDE linewidth is decreased by approximately -15% suggesting the loss of PDE moieties is mostly those with z-τc such as synaptic vesicles. These findings suggest molecular alterations related to both membrane phospholipid and high-energy metabolism in these subjects.
[00303] The methods describe herein treat depression and bi-polar depression with ALCAR, thereby avoiding unwanted side-effects exhibited by conventional antidepressant agents. ALCAR also helps prevents recurrent episodes of depression and bi-polar depression.
MOLECULAR STUDIES OF COGNITION IN ALCOHOLISM
[00304] Chronic alcoholism is a diverse and heterogeneous disorder that can be dichotomized into cognitively intact and cognitively impaired subgroups. At a molecular level, ethanol has been shown to have both acute and chronic effects on: (1) Membrane biophysical properties; (2) Membrane composition and metabolism; (3) Protein phosphorylation; (4) Lipid metabolic signaling; and (5) Lipoprotein transport of cholesterol. [00305] Cognitive status was determined by an index from the Halstead-Reitan Battery (HRB). Regionally specific molecular measures distinguish: (1) controls from chronic unimpaired (CUCAL) and impaired (CICAL) subjects; and (2) cognitively unimpaired from cognitively unimpaired alcoholism subjects.
[00306] FIG. 7 is a flow diagram illustrating a Method 40 for diagnosing chronic alcoholism in a human. At Step 42, molecular alterations in membrane phospholipid and high-energy phosphate metabolism are examined in a human brain with a medical imaging process. At Step 44, molecular alterations in synaptic transport vesicles are examined with the medical imaging process. At Step 46, molecular alternations in phosphorylated proteins are examined with the medical imaging process. At Step 48, and molecular alterations in metabolites with N-acetyl moieties and gangliosides are examined with the medical imaging process. At Step 50, the plural examined molecular alterations are used to determine if a conclusion of cognitively impaired chronic alcoholism in the human is suggested.
[00307] In one embodiment, Method 30 is used to study molecular underpinnings for cognitive impairment observed in some chronic alcoholism subjects using 3jP 1H magnetic resonance spectroscopic imaging examining molecular alterations in membrane phospholipid and high-energy phosphate metabolism, synaptic/transport vesicles, phosphorylated proteins and molecular alterations in metabolites with N- acetyl moieties, and gangliosides in a chronic alcoholism cohort (N=20; 10 cognitively unimpaired, 10 cognitively impaired) compared to a demographically matched control group (N=IO). However, the present invention is not limited to such a embodiment and imaging and molecular alterations can also be used to practice the invention. A statistical analysis was completed.
[00308] SAS PROC GENMOD: This is a Generalized Linear Model in version 8 of SAS software that allows analysis of correlated data arising from repeated measurements when the measurements are assumed to be multivariate. However, the present invention is not limited to using SAS and other statistical packages can also be use. Main effect terms used: Diagnosis, Brain Region, and Age. Interaction terms: Diagnosis * Brain Region. Table 1. illustrates experimental results.
Cognitively Unimpaired Alcoholism Subjects
Males: 5
Mean Age: 48.2 +/- 8.3 years
Average Impairment
Rating (AIR) Score: 1.8 +/- 0.3 Cognitively Impaired Alcoholism Subjects
Males: 4 Mean Age: 49.5 +/- 4.0 years AIR Score: 2.8 +/- 0.3
Control Subjects
Males: 16 Mean Age: 40.8 +/- 5.9 years
Mean Age Comparisons of Study Groups:
CICAL vs. Control, p=0 02; CUCAL vs. Controls, p=0.03
Table 1.
[00309] FIG. 8 is a block diagram 42 of a phosphorous magnetic resonance spectroscopic image illustrating Chronic Alcoholism in Males Cognitively Impaired (N=4) versus Cognitively Unimpaired (N=5) where p < 0.0001.
[00310] FIG. 9 is a block diagram 44 of a phosphorous magnetic resonance spectroscopic image illustrating Correlations — MRS metabolites versus Neuropsychological Scores (N=9).
[00311] FIG. 9 illustrates (α-γ)ATP TRA TIME p=0.002, r=0.094, TRB TIME, p=0.006 and r=0.089, TRB time p=0.02, r=(-0.94), PME(s-τc) VIQ p=0.001, r=(- 0.92), FSIQ p=0.005, i=(-0.87), NAA/PCr+Cr p=0.002, r=0.98.
[00312] The molecular changes found and illustrated in FIGS. 8 and 9 primarily involve membrane repair, with faulty repair processes in individuals with cognitive impairment, predominantly in posterior regions of the brain. These experimental results reveal regional molecular/metabolic alterations of phospholipid and ganglioside metabolism which distinguish cognitively impaired and cognitively unimpaired chronic alcoholism subjects from controls and cognitively impaired from cognitively unimpaired subjects.
[00313] FIG. 10 is flow diagram illustrating a Method 46 for diagnosing chronic alcoholism in a human. At Step 48, a human brain is imaged with a medical imaging process. In Step 50, a first signal intensity for membrane phospholipid building blocks including phosphomonoesters (PME(s-τc)) is measured in left inferior parietal regions of a human brain. At Step 52, a second signal intensity for synaptic/transport vesicles including phosphodiesters (PDE(i-τc)) is measured in right inferior parietal regions of the human brain. At Step 54, a third signal intensity for lipid/protein glycosylation intermediates and membrane phospholipid cofactors ((α-γ)ATP) is measured in a left occipital region of the human brain. At Step 56, a fourth signal intensity for N-acetylaspartate/phosphocreatine+creatine (NAA/PCr+Cr) reflecting increased N-acetylaspartate or N-acetylated sugars is measured in a left superior temporal region of the human brain. At Step 58, determine if a conclusion of cognitively impaired chronic alcoholism in the human is suggested using the plural measurements.
[00314] It has been experimentally determined that cognitively impaired (i.e., compared with cognitively unimpaired) chronic alcoholism subjects demonstrate: (1) Increased membrane phospholipid building blocks (PME(s-τc)) in left inferior parietal regions of a human brain; (2) Decreased synaptic/transport vesicles (PDE(i-τc)) in the right inferior parietal region of the human brain; (3) Increased lipid/protein glycosylation intermediates and membrane phospholipid cofactors ((α-γ)ATP) in the left occipital region of the human brain; and (4) Increased NAA/PCr+Cr reflecting increased N-acetylaspartate or N-acetylated sugars in the left superior temporal region of the human brain.
[00315] These findings conclude the cognitively impaired chronic alcoholism subjects have increased neural membrane repair mechanisms which are failing [ i.e., t PME(s-Tc), t(α-γ)ATP, t NAA/PCr+Cr ] which is consistent with evidence of loss of synaptic/transport vesicles [ -J- PDE(i-τc)].
[00316] Neuropsychological - Molecular/Metabolic Correlations. Markers of synaptic/transport vesicles (PDE(i-τc)) intermediates in protein, lipid glycosylation, and membrane phospholipid metabolism ((α-γ)ATP) and a measure of neuronal integrity or ganglioside synthesis (NAA/PCr+Cr ) correlate with better performance on several neuropsychological measures. This in general reflects repair of synaptic membranes which are enriched in gangliosides which contain sialated sugars. A marker of generalized membrane repair of damaged neural membranes (PME(s-τc)), has an inverse correlation with several neuropsychological measures. This suggests that generalized membrane degeneration is a later pathophysiological event than more localized synaptic membrane degeneration in chronic alcoholism.
[00317] Compared to controls, the CUCAL subjects had increased measures of phosphomonoesters in the right occipital region, suggesting that neural membrane repair mechanisms are operating in the CUCAL subjects. Compared to controls, the CICAL subjects had: Increased membrane phospholipid building blocks in the left inferior parietal and occipital; decreases in measures of phosphorylated proteins in the right inferior parietal; increases in measures of lipid and protein glycoslyation in the left inferior parietal and occipital; and increases in measures of N-acetylaspartate in the left superior temporal, right basal ganglia, and right inferior parietal regions.
[00318] These findings suggest attempts at membrane repair with decreased levels of phosphorylated peptides. Compared to CUCAL subjects CICAL subjects had: (1) increased membrane phospholipids in right superior temporal and left inferior parietal but decreases in right occipital; (2) decreased measures of synaptic vesicles in right inferior parietal; (3) increases in lipid and protein glycoslyation in the left occipital and (4) increased measures of Ν-acetylaspartate (ΝAA) or other Ν-acetylglutamic acids (NAG) in the left superior temporal, right basal ganglia, and right inferior parietal regions. These findings suggest the CICAL subjects have failing membrane repair mechanisms consistent with evidence of loss of synaptic vesicles.
MOLECULAR STUDIES OF COGNITION IN SCHIZOPHRENIA
[00319] Subjects with schizophrenia illustrate molecular underpinnings for cognitive impairment similar to those observed in some chronic alcoholism subjects. Changes in chronic schizophrenia males (i.e., cognitively impaired versus cognitively unimpaired) demonstrate decreased PME(s-τc)in the right basal ganglia. These findings conclude the cognitively impaired chronic schizophrenia subjects do not have the neural membrane repair mechanisms [i.e., TPME(s-τc), t(α-γ)ATP, T NAA/PCr+Cr] which are seen in the chronic alcoholism subjects. Similarly, changes demonstrated for chronic alcoholism subjects compared with controls are not seen in chronic schizophrenia subjects. A positive correlation of NAA/PCr+Cr with IQ measures in the left superior temporal and a negative correlation of PME(s-τc) with average impairment rating (AIR) in the right superior temporal region in chronic schizophrenia subjects were not seen in chronic alcoholism subjects. A statistical analysis was completed.
[00320] SAS PROC GENMOD: This is a Generalized Linear Model in version 8 of SAS software that allows analysis of correlated data arising from repeated measurements when the measurements are assumed to be multivariate. However, the present invention is not limited to using SAS and other statistical packages can also be use. Main effect terms used: Diagnosis, Brain Region, and Age. Interaction terms: Diagnosis * Brain Region. Table 2 illustrates experimental results. Cognitively Unimpaired Schizophrenia Subjects:
Males: 16 Mean Age: 42. 6 +/- 8.0 years Average Impairment Rating (AIR) Score: 1.6 +/- 0.5
Cognitively Impaired Schizophrenia Subjects
Males: 19 Mean Age: 47.3 +/- 7.5 years AIR Score: 3.0 +/- 0.3
Control Subjects
Males: 10 Mean Age: 42.0 +/- 10.6 years AIR Score: 1.1 +/- 0.5
Middle Age Smokers
Males (N=4) Females (N=4) Mean Age: 40.1 +/- 4.0 years
Table 2.
[00321] FIG. 11 is a block diagram 60 of a phosphorous magnetic resonance spectroscopic image illustrating Chronic Schizophrenia (males): Cognitively Impaired (N= 19) versus Cognitively Unimpaired (N= 16) where p <= 0.01.
[00322] FIG. 12 is a block diagram 62 of a phosphorous magnetic resonance spectroscopic image illustrating Correlations — MRS Metabolites vs. Neuropsychological Scores (N=35) and illustrates PME(s-τc) AIR, NAA/PCr+Cr FSIQ, VIQ, PIQ, where p <= 0.005 and r > 0.45.
[00323] Subjects with using nicotine do not illustrate the same molecular underpinnings for cognitive impairment observed in some chronic alcoholism subjects.
[00324] FIG.13 is a block diagram 64 of a phosphorous magnetic resonance spectroscopic image illustrating Effects of Nicotine: Middle Age Smokers (N=8), Nicotine vs. Placebo Patch, and illustrates PME(s-τc) and PDE(i-τc) levels where pO.Ol.
[00325] FIGS. 11-13 illustrate that compared to chronic alcoholism subjects similar metabolic patterns were not observed in chronic schizophrenia subjects (cognitively unimpaired or impaired) and were not observed in middle age smokers after nicotine challenge. [00326] The HRB-based AIR proved to be a valid indicator of metabolic differences between cognitively impaired and unimpaired subjects. Several of the striking molecular findings in the chronic alcoholism subjects are in regions of the brain (basal ganglia and right inferior parietal) that have been implicated by neuropsychological findings of complex motor and visual-spatial deficits.
[00327] While the invention has been described in connection with what is presently considered to be the most practical and preferred embodiment, it is to be understood that the invention is not to be limited to the disclosed embodiment, but on the contrary, is intended to cover various modifications and equivalent arrangements included within the spirit and scope of the appended claims.
[00328] It should be understood that the architecture, programs, processes, methods and systems described herein are not related or limited to any particular type of component or compound unless indicated otherwise. Various types of general purpose or specialized components and compounds may be used with or perform operations in accordance with the teachings described herein.
[00329] In view of the wide variety of embodiments to which the principles of the present invention can be applied, it should be understood that the illustrated embodiments are exemplary only, and should not be taken as limiting the scope of the present invention. For example, the steps of the flow diagrams may be taken in sequences other than those described, and more or fewer elements may be used in the block diagrams.
[00330] The claims should not be read as limited to the described order or elements unless stated to that effect. In addition, use of the term "means" in any claim is intended to invoke 35 U.S. C. §112, paragraph 6, and any claim without the word "means" is not so intended.
[00331] Therefore, all embodiments that come within the scope and spirit of the following claims and equivalents thereto are claimed as the invention.

Claims

WE CLAIM:
1. A method for diagnosing alcoholism disease in a human, comprising: examining molecular alterations in membrane phospholipid and high-energy phosphate metabolism in a human brain with a medical imaging process; examining molecular alterations in synaptic transport vesicles with the medical imaging process; examining molecular alternations in phosphorylated proteins with the medical imaging process; examining molecular alterations in metabolites with N-acetyl moieties and gangliosides are examined with the medical imaging process; and determining with the plurality of examined molecular alterations whether a conclusion of cognitively impaired chronic alcoholism in the human is suggested.
2. The method of Claim 1 wherein the molecular alterations in the membrane phospholipid and high-energy phosphate metabolism includes molecular alterations in phosphomonoesters (PME(s-τc)) in left inferior parietal regions of the human brain.
3. The method of Claim 1 wherein the molecular alterations in synaptic transport vesicles includes molecular alterations in phosphodiesters (PDE(z-τc)) in a right inferior parietal region of the human brain.
4. The method of Claim 1 wherein the molecular alterations in phosphorylated proteins include molecular alternations in phospholipid cofactors ((α-γ)ATP) in a left occipital region of the human brain.
5. The method of Claim 1 wherein the molecular alterations in metabolites with N-acetyl moieties and gangliosides include molecular alterations in N-acetylaspartate/phosphocreatine+creatine (NAA/PCr+Cr) reflecting increased N- acetylaspartate or N-acetylated sugars in a left superior temporal region of the human brain.
6. The method of Claim 1 wherein the determining step includes determining a conclusion of cognitively impaired chronic alcoholism in the human if the plurality of examined molecular alterations indicate increased neural membrane repair mechanisms which are failing including an increase in phosphomonoesters (PME(s- τc)), an increase in phospholipid cofactors ((α-γ)ATP), an increase in N-acetylaspartate/phosphocreatine+creatine (NAA/PCr+Cr) reflecting increased N- acetylaspartate or N-acetylated sugars and a loss of synaptic/transport vesicles reflecting a descrease in phosphodiesters (PDE(?-τc)) in the human brain.
7. The method of Claim 1 wherein the medical imaging process includes magnetic resonance imaging or positron emission tomography.
8. The method of Claim 1 wherein the molecular alterations are measured with a signal intensity of a magnetic or radioactive signal.
9. The method of Claim 1 wherein the medical imaging process includes 3iP 1H magnetic resonance spectroscopic imaging.
10. A method for diagnosing alcoholism disease in a human, comprising: imaging a brain of a human with a medical imaging process; determining a first signal intensity for membrane phospholipid building blocks including phosphomonoesters (PME(,s-tc)) in left inferior parietal regions of the human brain; determining a second signal intensity for synaptic/transport vesicles including phosphodiesters (PDE(z-τc)) in right inferior parietal regions of the human brain; determining a third signal intensity for lipid/protein glycosylation intermediates and membrane including phospholipid cofactors ((α-γ)ATP) in left occipital regions of the human brain; determining a fourth signal intensity for
N-acetylaspartate/phosphocreatine+creatine (NAA/PCr+Cr) reflecting increased N-acetylaspartate or N-acetylated sugars in left superior temporal regions of the human brain; and determining whether a conclusion of cognitively impaired chronic alcoholism in the human is suggested using the plurality of determined signal intensities.
11. The method of Claim 10 wherein the medical imaging process includes magnetic resonance imaging or positron emission tomography.
12. The method of Claim 10 wherein the steps of determining a first, second third or forth signal intensity includes measuring a signal intensity of a magnetic or radioactive signal.
13. The method of Claim 10 wherein the medical imaging process includes 31P 1H magnetic resonance spectroscopic imaging.
14. The method of Claim 10 wherein a conclusion of cognitively impaired chronic alcoholism in the human is suggested if the plurality of determined signal intensities indicate increased neural membrane repair mechanisms which are failing including an increase in phosphomonoesters (PME(s-τc)), an increase in phospholipid cofactors ((α-γ)ATP), an increase in N- acetylaspartate/phosphocreatine+creatine (ΝAA/, PCr+Cr) reflecting increased Ν- acetylaspartate or Ν-acetylated sugars and a loss of synaptic/transport vesicles reflecting a decrease in phosphodiesters (PDE(z-τc)) in the human brain.
15. A system for diagnosing alcoholism disease in a human, comprising in combination: means for examining molecular alterations in membrane phospholipid and high-energy phosphate metabolism in a human brain with a medical imaging process; means for examining molecular alterations in synaptic transport vesicles with the medical imaging process; means for examining molecular alternations in phosphorylated proteins with the medical imaging process; means for examining molecular alterations in metabolites with N-acetyl moieties and gangliosides are examined with the medical imaging process; and means for determining with the plurality of examined molecular alterations whether a conclusion of cognitively impaired chronic alcoholism in the human is suggested.
16. The system of Claim 15 wherein the means for determining with the plurality of examined molecular alterations whether a conclusion of cognitively impaired chronic alcoholism in the human is suggested includes a means for determining a conclusion of cognitively impaired chronic alcoholism in the human if the plurality of examined molecular alterations indicate increased neural membrane repair mechanisms which are failing including an increase in phosphomonoesters (PME(s-τc)), an increase in phospholipid cofactors ((α-γ)ATP), an increase in
N-acetylaspartate/phosphocreatine+creatine (NAA/PCr+Cr) reflecting increased N-acetylaspartate or N-acetylated sugars and a loss of synaptic/transport vesicles reflecting a descrease in phosphodiesters (PDE(f-τc)) in the human brain.
PCT/US2006/032749 2005-08-23 2006-08-23 Method and system for diagnosis of alcoholism WO2007024845A2 (en)

Applications Claiming Priority (2)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US11/209,318 US7700074B2 (en) 2002-02-07 2005-08-23 Method and system for diagnosis of neuropsychiatric disorders including chronic alcoholism
US11/209,318 2005-08-23

Publications (2)

Publication Number Publication Date
WO2007024845A2 true WO2007024845A2 (en) 2007-03-01
WO2007024845A3 WO2007024845A3 (en) 2007-08-02

Family

ID=37772280

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
PCT/US2006/032749 WO2007024845A2 (en) 2005-08-23 2006-08-23 Method and system for diagnosis of alcoholism

Country Status (2)

Country Link
US (1) US7700074B2 (en)
WO (1) WO2007024845A2 (en)

Families Citing this family (17)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US8894973B2 (en) * 2002-02-07 2014-11-25 Jay W. Pettegrew Method and system for differential diagnosis of chronic schizophrenia and chronic alcoholism
US20100010336A1 (en) * 2002-02-07 2010-01-14 Pettegrew Jay W Method and system for diagnosis of neuropsychiatric disorders including attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (adhd), autism, and schizophrenia
US20060257842A1 (en) * 2003-05-29 2006-11-16 Pettegrew Jay W Cryopreservation media and molecules
US7912781B2 (en) 2004-06-08 2011-03-22 Rosenthal Collins Group, Llc Method and system for providing electronic information for risk assessment and management for multi-market electronic trading
US8429059B2 (en) 2004-06-08 2013-04-23 Rosenthal Collins Group, Llc Method and system for providing electronic option trading bandwidth reduction and electronic option risk management and assessment for multi-market electronic trading
US7801801B2 (en) 2005-05-04 2010-09-21 Rosenthal Collins Group, Llc Method and system for providing automatic execution of black box strategies for electonic trading
US8364575B2 (en) 2005-05-04 2013-01-29 Rosenthal Collins Group, Llc Method and system for providing automatic execution of black box strategies for electronic trading
US8589280B2 (en) 2005-05-04 2013-11-19 Rosenthal Collins Group, Llc Method and system for providing automatic execution of gray box strategies for electronic trading
US20070081699A1 (en) * 2005-09-29 2007-04-12 General Electric Company Systems, methods and apparatus for diagnosis of disease from categorical indices
US7929737B2 (en) 2005-09-29 2011-04-19 General Electric Company Method and system for automatically generating a disease severity index
US7849000B2 (en) 2005-11-13 2010-12-07 Rosenthal Collins Group, Llc Method and system for electronic trading via a yield curve
US7734533B2 (en) 2005-11-13 2010-06-08 Rosenthal Collins Group, Llc Method and system for electronic trading via a yield curve
US20110077503A1 (en) * 2009-08-25 2011-03-31 Medical University Of South Carolina Automatic MRI Quantification of Structural Body Abnormalities
CA2907504C (en) 2013-03-27 2023-01-17 Theranos, Inc. Methods, devices, and systems for sample analysis
WO2014182896A1 (en) * 2013-05-10 2014-11-13 Johns Hopkins University Compositions for ovarian cancer assessment having improved specificity
JP2022523564A (en) 2019-03-04 2022-04-25 アイオーカレンツ, インコーポレイテッド Data compression and communication using machine learning
TWI698887B (en) * 2019-05-31 2020-07-11 行政院原子能委員會核能研究所 Brain function image data augmentation method

Citations (1)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US6255057B1 (en) * 1996-07-26 2001-07-03 Ernest Gallo Clinic And Research Center Detection of cellular exposure to ethanol

Family Cites Families (69)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US394841A (en) * 1888-12-18 Carl duisberg
US329638A (en) * 1885-11-03 Fabriken
US622961A (en) * 1899-04-11 Ivan levinstein and carl mensching
US401024A (en) * 1889-04-09 Benfabriken
US1979534A (en) * 1931-10-15 1934-11-06 Farastan Company Disazo compound for therapeutic use
FR2398046A1 (en) * 1977-07-18 1979-02-16 Inst Francais Du Petrole L-CARNITINE ENZYMATIC SYNTHESIS
US4346107A (en) * 1979-02-12 1982-08-24 Claudio Cavazza Pharmaceutical composition comprising acyl-carnitine for the treatment of impaired cerebral metabolism
US4642290A (en) * 1982-12-06 1987-02-10 Sih Charles J Process for preparing a compound for use in the production of L-carnitine
JPS59192095A (en) * 1983-04-13 1984-10-31 Ajinomoto Co Inc Preparation of l-carnitine
US4542098A (en) * 1983-05-06 1985-09-17 Institut Francais Du Petrole Production of glucose dehydrogenase and use of the resultant enzyme in the enzymatic synthesis of L-carnitine
DD221905B1 (en) * 1983-11-03 1987-03-18 Univ Leipzig PROCESS FOR THE PREPARATION OF L (-) - CARNITINE AND ITS DERIVATIVES
FI86889C (en) * 1984-03-29 1992-10-26 Lonza Ag Process for the preparation of L-carnitine in a microbiological manner
IT1177874B (en) * 1984-07-04 1987-08-26 Sigma Tau Ind Farmaceuti ESTERS OF ACETYL CARNITINE, PROCEDURES FOR ITS PREPARATION AND PHARMACEUTICAL COMPOSITIONS CONTAINING IT
CH664374A5 (en) * 1985-02-27 1988-02-29 Lonza Ag METHOD FOR PRODUCING L-CARNITIN BY A MICROBIOLOGICAL WAY.
US5008099A (en) * 1987-04-08 1991-04-16 Salutar, Inc. Amyloidosis and Alzheimer's disease diagnostic assay and reagents therefor
US4933156A (en) * 1987-04-08 1990-06-12 Salutar, Inc. Amyloidosis and Alzheimer's disease diagnostic assay and reagents therefor
US5039511A (en) * 1987-04-08 1991-08-13 Salutar, Inc. Amyloidosis and alzheimer's disease diagnostic assay and reagents therefor
US5231000A (en) * 1987-10-08 1993-07-27 The Mclean Hospital Antibodies to A4 amyloid peptide
US4965364A (en) * 1988-02-23 1990-10-23 Massachusetts Institute Of Technology Ligand-accelerated catalytic asymmetric dihydroxylation
US4996041A (en) * 1988-08-19 1991-02-26 Toshiyuki Arai Method for introducing oxygen-17 into tissue for imaging in a magnetic resonance imaging system
US5853985A (en) * 1988-08-30 1998-12-29 Bayer Aktiegsesellschaft Promoter of the gene for the human precursor of the alzheimer's disease and its use
US5066583A (en) * 1988-12-21 1991-11-19 Wisconsin Alumni Research Foundation Method for distinguishing alcoholics from non-alcoholics
JP3059735B2 (en) * 1989-10-13 2000-07-04 旭化成工業株式会社 L-carnitine dehydrogenase and method for producing the same
US6551576B1 (en) * 1989-12-22 2003-04-22 Bristol-Myers Squibb Medical Imaging, Inc. Container with multi-phase composition for use in diagnostic and therapeutic applications
US6088613A (en) * 1989-12-22 2000-07-11 Imarx Pharmaceutical Corp. Method of magnetic resonance focused surgical and therapeutic ultrasound
US5773024A (en) * 1989-12-22 1998-06-30 Imarx Pharmaceutical Corp. Container with multi-phase composition for use in diagnostic and therapeutic applications
US5585112A (en) * 1989-12-22 1996-12-17 Imarx Pharmaceutical Corp. Method of preparing gas and gaseous precursor-filled microspheres
US5668117A (en) * 1991-02-22 1997-09-16 Shapiro; Howard K. Methods of treating neurological diseases and etiologically related symptomology using carbonyl trapping agents in combination with previously known medicaments
EP0576611A4 (en) * 1991-03-13 1996-01-24 Univ Minnesota Radiopharmaceutical agents for the detection of alzheimer's disease
US5208037A (en) * 1991-04-22 1993-05-04 Alza Corporation Dosage forms comprising polymers comprising different molecular weights
GB9108756D0 (en) * 1991-04-24 1991-06-12 Ici Plc Production of polyalkanoate in plants
US5276059A (en) * 1992-07-10 1994-01-04 The United States Of America As Represented By The Department Of Health And Human Services Inhibition of diseases associated with amyloid formation
WO1994009371A1 (en) 1992-10-09 1994-04-28 Massachusetts Institute Of Technology Antemortem diagnostic test for alzheimer's disease
US5976816A (en) * 1993-05-03 1999-11-02 The United States Of America As Represented By The Department Of Health And Human Services Cell tests for alzheimer's disease
US6107050A (en) * 1993-05-03 2000-08-22 The United States Of America As Represented By The Department Of Health And Human Services Diagnostic test for alzheimers disease
US6300085B1 (en) * 1993-05-03 2001-10-09 The United States Of America As Represented By The Department Of Health And Human Services Diagnostic method for Alzheimer's disease
US6417178B1 (en) * 1994-07-19 2002-07-09 University Of Pittsburgh Amyloid binding nitrogen-linked compounds for the antemortem diagnosis of alzheimer's disease, in vivo imaging and prevention of amyloid deposits
US6168776B1 (en) * 1994-07-19 2001-01-02 University Of Pittsburgh Alkyl, alkenyl and alkynyl Chrysamine G derivatives for the antemortem diagnosis of Alzheimer's disease and in vivo imaging and prevention of amyloid deposition
US5879884A (en) * 1994-12-29 1999-03-09 Peroutka; Stephen J. Diagnosis of depression by linkage of a polymorphic marker to a segment of chromosome 19P13 bordered by D19S247 and D19S394
US6521211B1 (en) * 1995-06-07 2003-02-18 Bristol-Myers Squibb Medical Imaging, Inc. Methods of imaging and treatment with targeted compositions
US6139819A (en) * 1995-06-07 2000-10-31 Imarx Pharmaceutical Corp. Targeted contrast agents for diagnostic and therapeutic use
US6231834B1 (en) * 1995-06-07 2001-05-15 Imarx Pharmaceutical Corp. Methods for ultrasound imaging involving the use of a contrast agent and multiple images and processing of same
EP0770400B1 (en) * 1995-10-31 2003-02-26 Japan Science and Technology Corporation Acyl-L-carnitine labelled on the secondary acyl carbon atom and diagnostic agents containing it
ATE239232T1 (en) * 1996-06-14 2003-05-15 Mclean Hospital Corp IN VITRO H-NMR DETECTION OF FREQUENCY AND AMOUNT OF ALCOHOL INTAKE
IT1290801B1 (en) * 1996-07-05 1998-12-11 Mendes Srl USE OF ACETYL L-CARNITINE, ISOVALERYL L-CARNITINE, PROPIONYL L-CARNITINE OR THEIR PHARMACOLOGICALLY ACCEPTABLE SALTS
US6380252B1 (en) * 1996-07-05 2002-04-30 Sigma-Tau Industrie Farmaceutiche Riunite S.P.A. Use of L-acetylcarnitine, L-isovalerylcarnitine, L-propionylcarnitine for increasing the levels of IGF-1
ATE366588T1 (en) * 1996-09-11 2007-08-15 Imarx Pharmaceutical Corp METHOD FOR DIAGNOSTIC IMAGING OF THE KIDNEY REGION USING A CONTRAST AGENT AND A VASODILATOR
US5846517A (en) * 1996-09-11 1998-12-08 Imarx Pharmaceutical Corp. Methods for diagnostic imaging using a renal contrast agent and a vasodilator
US6120751A (en) * 1997-03-21 2000-09-19 Imarx Pharmaceutical Corp. Charged lipids and uses for the same
US5973004A (en) * 1997-04-04 1999-10-26 Howard; James R. L-carnitine, acetyl-L-carnitine, and pantothenic acid or ubiquinone, combined for prevention and treatment of syndromes related to ineffective energy metabolism
US5889055A (en) * 1997-04-04 1999-03-30 Howard; James R. L-carnitine and acetyl-L-carnitine combined for prevention and treatment of syndromes related to diseases of energy metabolism
US6416740B1 (en) * 1997-05-13 2002-07-09 Bristol-Myers Squibb Medical Imaging, Inc. Acoustically active drug delivery systems
US6066664A (en) * 1997-06-06 2000-05-23 Sigma-Tau Industrie Farmaceutiche Riunite S.P.A. Method for decreasing the appetite in bulimic, overweight individuals
IT1291930B1 (en) * 1997-06-18 1999-01-21 Sigma Tau Ind Farmaceuti MOOD TURN BALANCING COMPOSITION IN HEALTHY INDIVIDUALS
DE19749480A1 (en) * 1997-11-08 1999-05-20 Univ Leipzig Process for the production of L-carnitine from crotonobetaine
US6548047B1 (en) * 1997-09-15 2003-04-15 Bristol-Myers Squibb Medical Imaging, Inc. Thermal preactivation of gaseous precursor filled compositions
TW477702B (en) * 1997-10-23 2002-03-01 Dev Center Biotechnology Controlled release tacrine dosage form
ATE258430T1 (en) * 1998-03-04 2004-02-15 Takeda Chemical Industries Ltd PREPARATION WITH DELAYED RELEASE FOR AII ANTAGONISTS, THEIR PRODUCTION AND USE
IT1299182B1 (en) * 1998-05-29 2000-02-29 Sigma Tau Ind Farmaceuti CHEMICAL PROCEDURE FOR THE STEREOSELECTIVE SYNTHESIS OF R - (-) - CARNITINE.
IT1299195B1 (en) 1998-06-25 2000-02-29 Sigma Tau Healthscience Spa COMPOSITION WITH NEUROPROTECTIVE ACTIVITY FOR THE PREVENTION AND TREATMENT OF STATE-RELATED NERVOUS AND BEHAVIORAL ALTERATIONS
MXPA01000632A (en) * 1998-07-22 2002-05-06 Metabolix Inc Nutritional and therapeutic uses of 3-hydroxyalkanoate oligomers.
WO2000024919A1 (en) * 1998-10-27 2000-05-04 Sigma-Tau Industrie Farmaceutiche Riunite S.P.A. Coenzymes useful for the synthesis of l-carnitine
US6337197B2 (en) * 1998-10-27 2002-01-08 Sigma-Tau Industrie Farmaceutiche Riunite S.P.A. Coenzymes useful for the synthesis of L-carnitine
US6708053B1 (en) * 1999-03-04 2004-03-16 Science And Technology Corp. @ Unm Biochemical markers of brain function
US6313159B1 (en) * 1999-08-20 2001-11-06 Guilford Pharmaceuticals Inc. Metabotropic glutamate receptor ligand derivatives as naaladase inhibitors
US6348464B1 (en) * 1999-11-12 2002-02-19 Guilford Pharmaceuticals, Inc. Pyrrolecarbonylimino derivatives as naaladase inhibitors
US6589948B1 (en) * 2000-11-28 2003-07-08 Eukarion, Inc. Cyclic salen-metal compounds: reactive oxygen species scavengers useful as antioxidants in the treatment and prevention of diseases
JP2005523269A (en) 2002-02-07 2005-08-04 シグマ−タウ・インドゥストリエ・ファルマチェウチケ・リウニテ・ソシエタ・ペル・アチオニ Carnitine in the treatment of senile depression
ITRM20020620A1 (en) 2002-12-13 2004-06-14 Sigma Tau Ind Farmaceuti USE OF CARNITINE FOR THE PREVENTION AND / OR TREATMENT OF DISORDERS CAUSED BY ANDROPAUSE.

Patent Citations (1)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US6255057B1 (en) * 1996-07-26 2001-07-03 Ernest Gallo Clinic And Research Center Detection of cellular exposure to ethanol

Non-Patent Citations (7)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Title
BÖNSCH D; GREIFENBERG V; BAYERLEIN K; BIERMANN T; REULBACH U; HILLEMACHER T; KORNHUBER J; BLEICH S: "alpha-Synuclein protein levels are increased in alcoholic patients and are linked to craving" ALCOHOLISM: CLINICAL AND EXPERIMENTAL RESEARCH, vol. 29, no. 5, May 2005 (2005-05), pages 763-765, XP002433978 *
DATABASE BIOSIS [Online] BIOSCIENCES INFORMATION SERVICE, PHILADELPHIA, PA, US; 2001, PETTEGREW J W ET AL: "Metabolic effects of chronic alcoholism: A 31P-1H MRS Study" XP002433988 Database accession no. PREV200100552020 & SOCIETY FOR NEUROSCIENCE ABSTRACTS, vol. 27, no. 1, 2001, page 1496, 31ST ANNUAL MEETING OF THE SOCIETY FOR NEUROSCIENCE; SAN DIEGO, CALIFORNIA, USA; NOVEMBER 10-15, 2001 ISSN: 0190-5295 *
ESTILAEI M R; MATSON G B; PAYNE G S; LEACH M O; FEIN G; MEYERHOFF D J: "Effects of chronic alcohol consumption on the broad phospholipid signal in human brain: An in vivo 31P MRS study" ALCOHOLISM: CLINICAL AND EXPERIMENTAL RESEARCH, vol. 25, no. 1, January 2001 (2001-01), pages 89-97, XP002433977 *
GOLDSTEIN G; PETTEGREW J W; COMELIUS J: "Molecular studies of cognition in alcoholism" ALCOHOLISM: CLINICAL AND EXPERIMENTAL RESEARCH, vol. 29, no. 5s, May 2005 (2005-05), page 101A, XP009083852 *
MASON G F; BENDSZUS M; MEYERHOFF D J; HETHERINGTON H P; SCHWEINSBURG B; ROSS B, TAYLOR M; KRYSTAL J H: "magnetic resonance spectroscopic studies of alcoholism: From heavy drinking to alcohol dependence and back again" ALCOHOLISM: CLINICAL AND EXPERIMENTAL RESEARCH, vol. 29, no. 1, January 2005 (2005-01), pages 150-158, XP002433976 *
MEYERHOFF D J; BLUMENFELD R; TRURAN D; LINDGREN J; FLENNIKEN D; CARDENAS V; CHAO L L; ROTHLIND J; STUDHOLME C; WEINER M W: "Effects of heavy drinking, binge drinking, and family history of alcoholism on regional brain metabolism" ALCOHOLISM: CLINICAL AND EXPERIMENTAL RESEARCH, vol. 28, no. 4, April 2004 (2004-04), pages 650-661, XP002433980 *
MEYERHOFF D; MACKAY S; SAPPEY-MARINIER D; DEICKEN R; CALABRESE G; DILLON W P; WEINER M W; FEIN G: "Effects of chronic alcohol abuse and HIV infection on brain phosphorus metabolites" ALCOHOLISM: CLINICAL AND EXPERIMENTAL RESEARCH, vol. 19, no. 3, July 1995 (1995-07), pages 685-692, XP002433979 *

Also Published As

Publication number Publication date
US20060292547A1 (en) 2006-12-28
WO2007024845A3 (en) 2007-08-02
US7700074B2 (en) 2010-04-20

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
US7700074B2 (en) Method and system for diagnosis of neuropsychiatric disorders including chronic alcoholism
US20100010336A1 (en) Method and system for diagnosis of neuropsychiatric disorders including attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (adhd), autism, and schizophrenia
US7407778B2 (en) Compounds, compositions and methods for treating neuropsychiatric disorders
US20050272812A1 (en) Methor for use of acetyl-L-carnitine (ALCAR) for treatment of depressive disorders in humans
Kato et al. Magnetic resonance spectroscopy in affective disorders
Kato et al. Choline-containing compounds detected by proton magnetic resonance spectroscopy in the basal ganglia in bipolar disorder.
Schweinsburg et al. Chemical pathology in brain white matter of recently detoxified alcoholics: a 1H magnetic resonance spectroscopy investigation of alcohol‐associated frontal lobe injury
Rijpma et al. Altered brain high-energy phosphate metabolism in mild Alzheimer's disease: A 3-dimensional 31P MR spectroscopic imaging study
Renshaw et al. Basal ganglia choline levels in depression and response to fluoxetine treatment: an in vivo proton magnetic resonance spectroscopy study
Zahr et al. Brain injury and recovery following binge ethanol: evidence from in vivo magnetic resonance spectroscopy
Hassan et al. Blood and brain glutamate levels in children with autistic disorder
Rao et al. Fetal and neonatal iron deficiency causes volume loss and alters the neurochemical profile of the adult rat hippocampus
Atmaca et al. Hippocampal 1H MRS in patients with bipolar disorder taking valproate versus valproate plus quetiapine
Shi et al. Frontal lobe bioenergetic metabolism in depressed adolescents with bipolar disorder: a phosphorus‐31 magnetic resonance spectroscopy study
Scholey et al. A randomized controlled trial investigating the neurocognitive effects of Lacprodan® PL-20, a phospholipid-rich milk protein concentrate, in elderly participants with age-associated memory impairment: The Phospholipid Intervention for Cognitive Ageing Reversal (PLICAR): Study protocol for a randomized controlled trial
Lázaro et al. Proton magnetic resonance spectroscopy in pediatric obsessive–compulsive disorder: longitudinal study before and after treatment
Lee et al. Ex vivo detection for chronic ethanol consumption-induced neurochemical changes in rats
Shibuya-Tayoshi et al. Lithium effects on brain glutamatergic and GABAergic systems of healthy volunteers as measured by proton magnetic resonance spectroscopy
Harper et al. Brain levels of high‐energy phosphate metabolites and executive function in geriatric depression
Haji et al. Evaluation of regional cerebral blood flow in Alzheimer's disease patients with subclinical hypothyroidism
Ekici et al. Brain MRI and MR spectroscopy findings in children with nutritional vitamin B 12 deficiency
Janson et al. Lithium citrate for Canavan disease
Romeiro et al. Which of the branched-chain amino acids increases cerebral blood flow in hepatic encephalopathy? A double-blind randomized trial
Biedermann et al. 31P RINEPT MRSI and VBM reveal alterations in brain aging associated with major depression
Gzieło et al. MRI spectroscopic and tractography studies indicate consequences of long-term ketogenic diet

Legal Events

Date Code Title Description
NENP Non-entry into the national phase

Ref country code: DE

121 Ep: the epo has been informed by wipo that ep was designated in this application

Ref document number: 06802074

Country of ref document: EP

Kind code of ref document: A2

122 Ep: pct application non-entry in european phase

Ref document number: 06802074

Country of ref document: EP

Kind code of ref document: A2