relation: http://eprints.imtlucca.it/3333/ title: Individual differences in cerebral metabolic patterns during pharmacotherapy in obsessive-compulsive disorder: A multiple regression/discriminant analysis of positron emission tomographic data creator: Azari, Nina P. creator: Pietrini, Pietro creator: Horwitz, Barry creator: Pettigrew, Karen D. creator: Leonard, H.L. creator: Rapoport, Judith L. creator: Schapiro, Mark B. creator: Swedo, Susan E. subject: RC0321 Neuroscience. Biological psychiatry. Neuropsychiatry description: A multiple regression/discriminant analysis of positron emission tomographic cerebral metabolic (rCMRglc) data in 10 obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD) patients before and during pharmacotherapy was carried out to see if rCMRglc interdependencies distinguished OCD patients from controls. Before therapy, a discriminant function reflecting parietal, sensorimotor, and midbrain rCMRglc interdependencies correctly classified eight (80) of the 10 patients as OCD; after therapy, six (70) were classified as controls, most of whom were responders. Before therapy, rCMRglc interdependencies involving basal ganglia, thalamus, limbic, and sensory and association cortical regions distinguished 67 of patients who clinically responded to drug (RESP, n = 6) and 75 of patients who did not (NRESP, n = 4) from controls. After therapy, all RESP were classified as controls; classification of NRESP remained unchanged. The results suggest the conjunctive utility of this method to assess individual differences in rCMRglc during pharmacotherapy, and to explore the neurobiology of OCD. publisher: Elsevier date: 1993 type: Article type: PeerReviewed identifier: Azari, Nina P. and Pietrini, Pietro and Horwitz, Barry and Pettigrew, Karen D. and Leonard, H.L. and Rapoport, Judith L. and Schapiro, Mark B. and Swedo, Susan E. Individual differences in cerebral metabolic patterns during pharmacotherapy in obsessive-compulsive disorder: A multiple regression/discriminant analysis of positron emission tomographic data. Biological Psychiatry, 34 (11). 798 - 809. ISSN 0006-3223 (1993) relation: http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/000632239390069P relation: 10.1016/0006-3223(93)90069-P