Abstract

Profound mental retardation in phenylketonuria (PKU) can be prevented by a low phenylalanine (Phe) diet. However, even patients treated early have inconsistently shown deficits in several frontal lobe-related neuropsychological tasks such as the widely accepted Stroop task. The goal of this study was to investigate whether adult patients exhibit altered brain activation in Stroop-related locations in comparison to healthy controls and if an acute increase in blood Phe levels in patients has an effect on activation patterns. Seventeen male, early-treated patients with classic PKU (mean ± SD age: 31.0 ± 5.2years) and 15 male healthy controls (32.1 ± 6.4years) were compared using a color-word matching Stroop task in a functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) study at 3T. Participants were scanned twice, and an oral Phe load (100mg/kg body weight) was administered to patients prior to one of the fMRI sessions (placebo-controlled). Activity in brain regions that are known to be involved in Stroop tasks was assessed. PKU patients exhibited poorer accuracy in incongruent trials. Reaction times were not significantly different. There were no consistent differences in BOLD activations in Stroop-associated brain regions. The oral Phe administration had no significant effect on brain activity. Neither a generally slower task performance nor distinctively altered functioning of brain networks involved in a task representing a subset of dopamine-dependent executive functions could be proven. Decreased accuracy and inconsistent findings in posterior areas necessitate further study of frontal-lobe functioning in PKU patients in larger study samples.

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