Psychooncology
2001 Nov-Dec;10(6):541-6
Relationship
between trait anxiety, brain activity and natural killer cell activity in
cancer patients: a preliminary PET study.
Tashiro M,
Itoh M, Kubota K, Kumano H, Masud MM, Moser E, Arai H, Sasaki H
Division of
Nuclear Medicine, Cyclotron and Radioisotope Centre, Tohoku University, Sendai,
Japan. mtashiro@mail.cc.tohoku.ac.jp
The purpose
of this study is to examine the relationship between psychological factors,
regional brain activity and natural killer cell activity (NKA). Eight patients
with malignant diseases were studied by FDG-PET under a resting condition. NKA
and degree of anxiety and depression were measured using Taylor's manifest
anxiety scale (MAS) and Zung's self-rating depression scale (SDS). Linear
correlation of NKA and psychological measures to the regional brain metabolism
in cancer patients was examined using statistical parametric mapping (SPM).
Positive linear correlation between NKA and regional metabolic rate ratios was
identified in the visual association cortex, anterior cingulate gyrus (CG) and
sensorimotor area, and negative correlation was identified in the inferolateral
prefrontal cortex (ILPFC), prefrontal cortex (PFC), orbitofrontal cortex (OFC)
and anterior temporal cortex. Positive linear correlation to the MAS score was
identified in the visual association cortex, anterior CG, primary sensorimotor
area and the posterior parietal cortex, and negative correlation was detected
in the ILPFC, PFC, OFC and anterior temporal cortex. The NKA and MAS scores
positively correlated with each other (p<0.001). The result might serve as
supporting data for a hypothesis that psycho-immune interaction is also
mediated by the cerebral cortex and limbic system. Copyright 2001 John Wiley
& Sons, Ltd.
PMID:
11747066, UI: 21612777