Recognition and treatment of comorbid chronic psychotic symptoms in post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) has become of increasing clinical interest. Altered dopamine beta-hydroxylase (DBH) activity has been reported in mood disorders. Plasma DBH is reduced in major depression with psychosis and elevated in bipolar disorder with psychosis compared with their respective non-psychotic diagnostic groups. DBH is likely a trait marker with interindividual variations secondary to genetic polymorphism. We therefore evaluated DBH activity in PTSD patients with and without psychotic features and compared these groups with age- and gender-matched control subjects. Vietnam combat veterans with PTSD (n=19) (including patients with and without psychotic features) and normal control subjects (n=22) had plasma DBH enzyme activity assayed photometrically. DBH was significantly higher in patients with PTSD with psychotic features than in patients without psychotic features (80.6±13.4 vs. 42.1±7.3 mM/min, P<0.01)>P<0.01).>
Plasma dopamine beta-hydroxylase activity in psychotic and non-psychotic post-traumatic stress disorder
Authors: Hamner M.B.1; Gold P.B.
Source: Psychiatry Research, Volume 77, Number 3, 27 February 1998 , pp. 175-181(7)
1. Serum Dopamine-β-Hydroxylase: Decrease after Chemical Sympathectomy
Science 3 September 1971:
Vol. 173 no. 4000 pp. 931-934DOI:10.1126/science.173.4000.9312. After sympathectomy we have studied the re-appearence of nerve fibers showing catecholaminergic characteristics in the uvea of the guinea pig. Immunoreactivities for two catecholamine symthetizing enzymes, tyrosine hydroxylase (TH) and dopaminebeta-hydroxylase (DBH), were used as markers. Both TH-like and DBH-like immunoreactive nerve fibers disappeared after the extirpation of ipsilateral superior cervical ganglion. In the choroid the TH-like and DBH-like immunoreactive nerve fibers re-appeared within 2 weeks. In the iris and the ciliary body both of these types of immunoreactive nerve fibers re-appeared 10 weeks after the denervation. The morphological appearence of these re-appearing nerve fibers was not similar to those in the non-denervated uvea.
Nerve fibers showing immunoreactivities for thyrosine hydroxylase and dopamine-beta-hydroxylase re-appear in the guinea pig uvea after sympathectomy
Article first published online: 27 MAY 2009
DOI: 10.1111/j.1755-3768.1988.tb04034.x
Acta Ophthalmologica
Volume 66, Issue 4, pages 419–426, August 1988
3. We speculate from these data that low brain DBH activity may produce a type of vulnerability to psychotic decompensation and thereby influence the clinical course, although it does not cause schizophrenia, in general. Low CSF DBH activity may delineate a "reactive" subgroup from the heterogenous population of patients with diagnoses of schizophrenia.
CSF Dopamine β-Hydroxylase in Schizophrenia
Arch Gen Psychiatry. 1983;40(7):743-747. doi:10.1001/archpsyc.1983.01790060041005.
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