Daniel Amen has made a career out of performing SPECT scans (Single-Photon Emission Computed Tomography) for everything from diagnosing "ADHD, anxiety, depression, addiction, autism, ‘marital conflict’(?!), and for generally healthy people who want to lose weight, or just ‘optimise’ their brain." In addition to his 6 ‘Amen Clinics‘ he al;so offers SPECT scans for many in-patient mental health treatment facilities, including Sierra Tucson here in town.
The NeuroBollocks blog offers a very critical view of Dr. Amen - Utterly shameless diagnostic brain imaging neurobollocks. Here is an excerpt from the longer article:
A common theme in neuroimaging research is attempting to identify differences in the brains between different groups of people. Male/female, musicians/non-musicians, schizophrenics/non-schizophrenics, whatever. This is all very interesting and worthwhile – if we can identify a common brain pattern or structure that is different in say, schizophrenia then we may be able to devise better treatments that target it. Voxel-based morphometry is one common method of looking at differences and assesses the relative size/shape of different brain structures, but there are lots of other methods that either look at anatomical or functional differences. The important point here is that you always need a group of people of each type that you want to compare. People’s brains vary pretty widely in the size and shape of the sulci and gyri, and in the amount/location of functional activity that you see in a given task. What is being sought in these studies is a reliable difference that is consistent across the group, and remains as a statistical effect, once all the (random) individual variation has been taken into account. Many people’s brains are a bit funny-looking, but 99 times out of 100 it’s just normal individual variation.Read the whole article.
What this means is that developing imaging-based biomarkers that reliably indicate particular states or conditions in an individual is fraught with difficulty.Some progress is apparently being made in this endeavour, but a lot of people are still very sceptical about the idea, and rightly so.
However, Dr Amen, (of the eponymous ‘Amen Clinics‘) is certainly not one of those people. He’s been using diagnostic SPECT imaging for years, and has clinics in six major US cities. Dr Amen uses SPECT imaging to diagnose ADHD, anxiety, depression, addiction, autism, ‘marital conflict’(?!), and for generally healthy people who want to lose weight, or just ‘optimise’ their brain. How does taking a SPECT image of their brain help with this? It’s not really clear, but unsurprisingly, Dr Amen has a slick-looking brain-training-like program (‘The Amen Solution’) that promises all the usual bollocks, and an online store filled with his (many!) books, DVDs, etc. plus (of course) his own brand of dietary supplements. So, basically, I’m guessing that the results of the SPECT scans in his clinics typically indicate that the patient needs to complete a course of his brain-training, or supplements, or both.
Just to be clear – there’s absolutely no way that a SPECT scan of an individual can show up anything useful in diagnosing these disorders. Dr Amen is charging people thousands of dollars, and injecting them with radioactive substances, for absolutely no sound medical reason.
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