Effect of vigabatrin on striatal dopamine receptors: evidence in humans for interactions of GABA and dopamine systems

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Abstract

Vigabatrin is a specific y-aminobutyric acid transamnase inhibitor. The clinical use of this drug in the treatment of epilepsy has been sporadically linked to the development of psychosis. Using 123I-IBZM, a specific dopamine D2 receptor ligand and single photon emission tomography (SPET), one month of treatment with vigabatrin was associated with a decrease in specific binding of 123I-IBZM to D2 receptors in the left hemisphere basal ganglia. This change may provide one explanation for the development of psychosis in vulnerable patients.

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Ring, H. A., Trimble, M. R., George, M. S., Costa, D. C., Ell, P. J., & Verhoeff, P. (1992). Effect of vigabatrin on striatal dopamine receptors: evidence in humans for interactions of GABA and dopamine systems. Journal of Neurology, Neurosurgery and Psychiatry, 55(9), 758–761. https://doi.org/10.1136/jnnp.55.9.758

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