Quantitative evaluation of regional cerebral blood flow changes during childhood using 123I-N-isopropyl-iodoamphetamine single-photon emission computed tomography

2018 
Abstract Objective To quantitatively evaluate regional cerebral blood flow (rCBF) and regional developmental changes during childhood using 123 I-N-isopropyl-iodoamphetamine single-photon emission computed tomography (SPECT) and autoradiography. Methods We retrospectively analyzed quantitative values of rCBF in 75 children (29 girls) aged between 16 days and 178 months (median: 12 months), whose brain images, including magnetic resonance imaging and SPECT data, were normal under visual inspection at Saitama Children’s Medical Center between 2005 and 2015. The subjects had normal psychomotor development, no focal neurological abnormalities, and neither respiratory nor cardiac disease at the time of examination. Regions of interest were placed automatically using a three-dimensional stereotactic template. Results rCBF was lowest in neonates, who had greater rCBF in the lenticular nucleus, thalamus, and cerebellum than the cerebral cortices. rCBF increased rapidly during the first year of life, reaching approximately twice the adult levels at 8 years, and then fell to approximately adult levels in the late teenage years. Cerebral cortex rCBF sequentially increased in the posterior, central, parietal, temporal, and callosomarginal regions during infancy and childhood. Conclusions rCBF changed dramatically throughout childhood and ranged from lower than adult values to approximately two times higher than adult values. It had different trajectories in each region during brain development. Understanding this dynamic developmental change is necessary for SPECT image evaluation in children.
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