Methods: Relative regional cerebral blood Row was measured with SPECT
using Tc-99m-hexamethylpropyleneamine oxime in 13 patients with severe
unipolar depression that was nonresponsive to drug therapy and 11 age
-matched nondepressed controls. Results: All patients were clinically
depressed and taking antidepressant drugs at the time of the study. Th
e relative blood flow was significantly decreased bilaterally in the f
rontal cortex, anterior temporal cortex, anterior cingulate gyrus and
caudate in the depressed patients compared with the nondepressed healt
hy controls. The greatest decreases were seen in the paralimbic region
s, specifically, the inferior frontal and cingulate cortex. No signifi
cant changes were seen in the parietal cortex, occipital cortex or tha
lami. Psychiatric rating scales correlated poorly with regional blood
flow, except for the degree of psychomotor slowing, which was negative
ly correlated with frontal and cingulate perfusion. Conclusion: These
findings implicate selective dysfunction of paralimbic brain regions i
n clinically depressed patients, independent of their medication use,
and support the concept of specific neural systems that regulate mood.
Recognition of these regional abnormalities may have clinical utility
in both the diagnosis and treatment of depression.