Research Topics
| Pinelopi LundquistSummaryAffiliation: Uppsala University Country: Sweden Publications
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Detail Information
Publications
Potential of [11C]DASB for measuring endogenous serotonin with PET: binding studiesPinelopi Lundquist
Division of Pharmacokinetics and Drug Therapy, Department of Pharmaceutical Biosciences, Uppsala University, SE 751 24 Uppsala, Sweden
Nucl Med Biol 32:129-36. 2005..Ex vivo experiments performed after tranylcypromine injection (3 or 15 mg/kg) showed a dose-dependent trend in radioactivity uptake and suggested that serotonin may compete with [11C]DASB for transporter binding...
5-Hydroxy-L-[beta-11C]tryptophan versus alpha-[11C]methyl-L-tryptophan for positron emission tomography imaging of serotonin synthesis capacity in the rhesus monkey brainPinelopi Lundquist
Department of Pharmaceutical Biosciences, Division of Pharmacokinetics and Drug Therapy, Uppsala University, Uppsala, Sweden
J Cereb Blood Flow Metab 27:821-30. 2007..This suggests that the regional net accumulation rates obtained with these two PET tracers will be of different magnitude, which might be related to the activity of each targeted enzyme...
Effect on [11C]DASB binding after tranylcypromine-induced increase in serotonin concentration: positron emission tomography studies in monkeys and ratsPinelopi Lundquist
Division of Pharmacokinetics and Drug Therapy, Department of Pharmaceutical Biosciences, Uppsala University, SE 751 24 Uppsala, Sweden
Synapse 61:440-9. 2007..The possibility of using [(11)C]DASB as a tool for monitoring changes in endogenous serotonin concentrations merits further investigation...
Validation studies on the 5-hydroxy-L-[beta-11C]-tryptophan/PET method for probing the decarboxylase step in serotonin synthesisPinelopi Lundquist
Division of Pharmacokinetics and Drug Therapy, Department of Pharmaceutical Biosciences, Uppsala University, Box 591, SE-751 24 Uppsala, Sweden
Synapse 59:521-31. 2006..e., the conversion of HTP to serotonin). Elimination of the radiotracer metabolite [(11)C]HIAA from the brain may be considered negligible if the PET study is limited to 60 min...
