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SCANS SHOW PROGRESSIVE DAMAGE IN UNTREATED BIPOLAR DISORDER
Left untreated, bipolar disorder often worsens over time, with manic
and depressive symptoms occurring with increasing frequency. New
research indicates that this poor prognosis stems from progressive brain
damage caused by the disorder.
Raymond Deicken and colleagues compared 15 non-symptomatic
males with familial bipolar disorder to 20 controls, using proton magnetic
resonance spectroscopy. They found significantly lower concentrations
of N-acetylaspartate (NAA) in the right hippocampus of the bipolar
subjects, and those who had suffered from the disease the longest had
the lowest levels of NAA. NAA is the second most abundant amino acid
in brain tissue, and the researchers note, "Low NAA is an indication that
the integrity of neurons and/or axons has been compromised in some
way, either by damage, loss, or dysfunction." The decrease in NAA over
time in bipolar subjects, they say, indicates that the disease causes
progressive damage. Similar decreases in NAA are seen in Alzheimer's
disease, multiple sclerosis, Parkinson's disease, and other
neurodegenerative diseases.
Deicken et al. say their research also confirms that the hippocampus
plays a key role in bipolar disorder. Reduced hippocampal size, they
note, is also seen in patients with major depression
(see related article, Crime Times,
2003, Vol. 9, No. 4, Page 3).
The researchers say their findings offer insight as to why lithium is
highly effective in treating bipolar disorder. Studies on humans show that
lithium increases both the amount of NAA and the amount of gray matter
in the brain.
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"Lower concentration of hippocampal N-acetylaspartate in familial
bipolar I disorder," R. F. Deicken, M. P. Pegues, S. Anzalone, R. Feiwell,
and B. Soher, American Journal of Psychiatry, Vol. 160, No. 5,
May 2003, 873-82. Address: Raymond Deicken, Magnetic Resonance
Unit and Psychiatry Service, 116-N, Veterans Affairs Medical Center-San
Francisco, 4150 Clement Street, San Francisco, CA 94121,
deicken@itsa.ucsf.edu.
-- and --
"Study suggests bipolar disorder may cause progressive brain
damage," news release, University of California at San Francisco, May 6,
2003.
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