Prior studies of patients with dementia have found similar qualitative
patterns of cerebral glucose utilization with [18F]2-fluoro-2- deoxyglucose
(FDG) PET and of putative muscarinic receptor activity with
[123I]3-quinuclidinyl-4-iodobenzilate (IQNB). This raised doubts about
whether receptor binding determines IQNB distribution and whether clinical
information in IQNB scans is unique. To compare the methods directly, 4
normal volunteers and 7 patients with dementia underwent FDG PET and
high-resolution IQNB SPECT scans. In normal subjects, relative regional
activity from the paired scans was only weakly correlated (r = 0.29). Some
regions (e.g., thalamus, frontal cortex) showed a clear disassociation of
activity. In demented patients, IQNB scans tended to show larger defects
than FDG scans, although one focal defect appeared only with PET. Results
suggest that IQNB SPECT data are not primarily related to general
physiological activity or regional cerebral blood flow and are not
explained by attenuation or volume- averaging artifacts. Further studies
should investigate whether IQNB scanning is a more sensitive in vivo
measure of the extent of Alzheimer's disease than is FDG PET.Abstract Teaser