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NEUROLOGY 1981;31:517
© 1981 American Academy of Neurology

Tomographic mapping of human cerebral metabolism

Visual stimulation and deprivation

Michael E. Phelps, Ph.D., John C. Mazziotta, M.D., Ph.D., David E. Kuhl, M.D., Marc Nuwer, M.D., Ph.D., James Packwood, Ph.D., Jeffery Metter, M.D. and Jerome Engel, Jr., M.D., Ph.D.

Division of Nuclear Medicine and the Laboratory of Nuclear Medicine and Radiation Biology (Drs. Phelps and Kuhl) and the Department of Neurology (Drs. Mazziotta, Nuwer, Packwood, Metter, and Engel), UCLA School of Medicine, Los Angeles, CA.

Positron computed tomography was used to investigate changes in the local cerebral metabolic rate for glucose (LCMRGlc) of the visual cortex. Progressive increases in LCMRGlc were found from eyes-closed control to stimulation with white light, alternating black white checkerboard pattern, and a complex visual scene of a park, with the associative visual cortex increasing at a faster rate than the primary visual cortex as the visual scene complexity increased. A graded decrease in LCMRGlc of the visual cortex was found with a stepwise deletion of spontaneous cell firing at the retinal, geniculate and cortical level due to lesions. Lefthight metabolic symmetry of the visual cortex during monocular stimulation confirms 50% crossing of the human visual system. Neonatal blindness showed no apparent degeneration of the visual cortex and was equivalent to eyes-closed controls. The interictal state of a patient with visual seizures demonstrated a hypometabolic visual cortex with a 2.5-fold increase in metabolism during an ictal visual hallucination.

Address correspondence and reprint requests to Dr. Phelps, Department of Radiological Sciences, Division of Nuclear Medicine, UCLA School of Medicine, Los Angeles, CA 90024.

This work was partially supported by DOE contract DE-AM03-76-SF00012, and by NIH grants ROI-GM-24839-01, and POI-NS 1 56 54-01. Presented at the thirty-second annual meeting of the American Academy of Neurology, New Orleans, LA, May 1980.

Accepted for publication November 6, 1980.




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