Spatial variation in regional blood flow, metabolism and receptor density within the brain and in other organs is measurable even with a low spatial resolution technique such as emission tomography. It has been previously shown that the observed variance increases with increasing number of subregions in the organ/tissue studied. This resolution-dependent variance can be described by fractal analysis. We studied striatal dopamine re-uptake sites in 39 healthy volunteers with high-resolution single-photon emission tomography using iodine-123 labelled 2beta-carbomethoxy-3beta-(4-iodophenyl)tropane ([123I]beta-CIT). The mean fractal dimension was 1.15+/-0.07. The results indicate that regional striatal dopamine re-uptake sites involve considerable spatial heterogeneity which is higher than the uniform density (dimension=1.00) but much lower than complete randomness (dimension=1.50). There was a gender difference, with females having a higher heterogeneity in both the left and the right striatum. In addition, we found striatal asymmetry (left-to-right heterogeneity ratio of 1.19+/-0.15; P<0.001), suggesting functional hemispheric lateralization consistent with the control of motor behaviour and integrative functions.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/BF01254238 | DOI Listing |
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