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Departments of Radiology and Neurology, Brigham and Women's Hospital and Harvard Medical School, Boston
and Alcohol and Drug Abuse Research Center and Department of Neurology, McLean Hospital, Belmont, Massachusetts
Correspondence: For correspondence or reprints contact: B. Leonard Holman, MD, Chairman, Dept. of Radiology, Brigham and Women's Hospital, 75 Francis St., Boston, MA 02115.
ABSTRACT
Cocaine abuse continues to be a major public health concern, with a variety of medical and neurologic sequelae. Previous studies have demonstrated abnormalities in cerebral perfusion in chronic cocaine abusers and after acute administration of cocaine. Although women are becoming increasingly represented among drug abusers, few studies have included women. To the authors' knowledge, none has compared cerebral perfusion in asymptomatic women with that in men. Methods: The cerebral perfusion of 13 cocaine-dependent women, 4 of whom were also heroin dependent, was studied with 99mTc hexamethylpropyleneamine oxime (HMPAO) SPECT. These women were compared with 13 cocaine-dependent men and 26 healthy control subjects. Structural brain lesions and neurologic abnormalities were excluded by MRI and neurologic evaluation. Perfusion studies were interpreted in a standardized fashion by reviewers blinded to clinical information. Results: It was found that cocaine-dependent women were much less likely to have abnormal study findings than cocaine-dependent men (p = 0.003) and were indistinguishable from normal women (p = 1.0). However, the results in both women and men who concurrently used heroin plus cocaine were all abnormal. Perfusion abnormalities tended to be located in anterior brain structures, such as the frontal and temporal cortex and the basal ganglia. Conclusion: These data suggest that cocaine-dependent women have fewer abnormalities in cerebral perfusion than cocaine-dependent men, but that concurrent abuse of heroin and cocaine is associated with more perfusion abnormalities in both sexes.
Key Words: cerebrovascular circulation brain cocaine heroin SPECT
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