Lui Su, Zhou Xiaohong Joe, Sweeney John A, Gong Qiyong
From the Huaxi MR Research Center, Department of Radiology, West China Hospital of Sichuan University, Chengdu 610041, China (S.L., J.A.S., Q.G.); and Center for MR Research and Departments of Radiology, Neurosurgery and Bioengineering, University of Illinois at Chicago, Chicago, Ill (X.J.Z.).
Radiology. 2016 Nov;281(2):357-372. doi: 10.1148/radiol.2016152149.
Unlike neurologic conditions, such as brain tumors, dementia, and stroke, the neural mechanisms for all psychiatric disorders remain unclear. A large body of research obtained with structural and functional magnetic resonance imaging, positron emission tomography/single photon emission computed tomography, and optical imaging has demonstrated regional and illness-specific brain changes at the onset of psychiatric disorders and in individuals at risk for such disorders. Many studies have shown that psychiatric medications induce specific measurable changes in brain anatomy and function that are related to clinical outcomes. As a result, a new field of radiology, termed psychoradiology, seems primed to play a major clinical role in guiding diagnostic and treatment planning decisions in patients with psychiatric disorders. This article will present the state of the art in this area, as well as perspectives regarding preparations in the field of radiology for its evolution. Furthermore, this article will (a) give an overview of the imaging and analysis methods for psychoradiology; (b) review the most robust and important radiologic findings and their potential clinical value from studies of major psychiatric disorders, such as depression and schizophrenia; and (c) describe the main challenges and future directions in this field. An ongoing and iterative process of developing biologically based nomenclatures with which to delineate psychiatric disorders and translational research to predict and track response to different therapeutic drugs is laying the foundation for a shift in diagnostic practice in psychiatry from a psychologic symptom-based approach to an imaging-based approach over the next generation. This shift will require considerable innovations for the acquisition, analysis, and interpretation of brain images, all of which will undoubtedly require the active involvement of radiologists. RSNA, 2016 Online supplemental material is available for this article.
与脑肿瘤、痴呆和中风等神经系统疾病不同,所有精神疾病的神经机制仍不清楚。通过结构和功能磁共振成像、正电子发射断层扫描/单光子发射计算机断层扫描以及光学成像获得的大量研究表明,在精神疾病发作时以及有此类疾病风险的个体中,存在区域特异性和疾病特异性的大脑变化。许多研究表明,精神科药物会在大脑解剖结构和功能上引起特定的、可测量的变化,这些变化与临床结果相关。因此,一个名为心理放射学的放射学新领域似乎已准备好在指导精神疾病患者的诊断和治疗规划决策中发挥重要的临床作用。本文将介绍该领域的最新进展,以及放射学领域为其发展所做准备的相关观点。此外,本文将:(a) 概述心理放射学的成像和分析方法;(b) 回顾来自抑郁症和精神分裂症等主要精神疾病研究中最可靠且重要的放射学发现及其潜在临床价值;(c) 描述该领域的主要挑战和未来方向。一个正在进行的、迭代的过程,即开发基于生物学的命名法来描述精神疾病,并进行转化研究以预测和跟踪对不同治疗药物的反应,正在为精神病学诊断实践从基于心理症状的方法向基于成像的方法转变奠定基础。这种转变将需要在脑图像的采集、分析和解释方面进行大量创新,而所有这些无疑都需要放射科医生的积极参与。RSNA,2016 本文提供在线补充材料。