The overall design of the study is to perform both a PET and MRI scan on objectively identified borderline personality disorder patients, to treat them with olanzapine for 8 weeks, and to then re-scan the patients with PET.
The primary objective of this proposed study will be to compare the baseline PET scan to the endpoint scan in 15 BPD patients who have been treated with olanzapine. The comparison of the scans will be done through a statistical image analysis, using a pixel-by-pixel group mean subtraction strategy with appropriate correction for multiple comparisons. In an exploratory fashion we will compare frontal and temporal regions of interest to address hypotheses of which areas of the brain might show changes with olanzapine treatment. A secondary objective is to use a normal database to compare the baseline PET scan of the 15 patients in a medication free state to normal subjects. The advantage of this strategy is the ability to closely match subjects by gender and age. As noted earlier, Dr. Pardo has data on 35 control subjects studied on the same scanner we plan to use for this study.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
NA
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
19
Olanzapine 2.5mg by mouth at bedtime x2 weeks, then Olanzapine 5mg by mouth at bedtime x2 weeks, then Olanzapine 7.5mg by mouth at bedtime x4 weeks.
University of Minnesota, Dept of Psychiatry
Minneapolis, Minnesota, United States
Change in Brain Metabolism From Baseline to Eight Weeks as Seen in PET Scan
The primary aim of this imaging study was to examine the effect of olanzapine on brain metabolism over the eight weeks of administration. To compare the baseline PET scan to the endpoint scan,
Time frame: Baseline to 8 weeks
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