Accéder au contenu
Merck

Aging effect on neutral amino acid transport at the blood-brain barrier measured with L-[2-18F]-fluorophenylalanine and PET.

Journal of nuclear medicine : official publication, Society of Nuclear Medicine (1995-07-01)
H Ito, J Hatazawa, M Murakami, S Miura, H Iida, P M Bloomfield, I Kanno, H Fukuda, K Uemura
RÉSUMÉ

Neutral amino acids (NAAs) are transported from the blood to the brain using the same carrier system in a competitive fashion. The purpose of this study is to establish a method for evaluating neutral amino acid transport at the blood-brain barrier (BBB) in humans and to examine the aging effect of amino acid transport. A dynamic PET study with L-(2-18F)-fluorophenylalanine (18F-Phe) was performed in 14 normal volunteers (age 21-71 yr; mean +/- s.d., age range 48.0 +/- 17.1 yr). By using a two-compartment model analysis and a weighted integration technique, the influx rate constant K1, the efflux rate constant k2 and distribution volume Vd of 18F-Phe were estimated in various brain structures. The value of K1 was inversely correlated with plasma NAA concentration (r = -0.69, p < 0.01). The cerebellum showed the highest value of K1, while the white matter showed the lowest. There was no significant change in K1 during aging. The value of k2 was significantly increased with age. No decline of K1 during aging indicated that NAA transport from the blood to the brain is a limiting process of age in amino acid incorporation. Fluorine-18-Phe PET imaging is a feasible method to study NAA transport at the BBB in vivo in humans and can be applied to pathological conditions of the brain.