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Bipolar Disorder Pathways 1 from Jamison KEY: H= Asylum or psychiatric hospital; S= Suicide; SA = Suicide Attempt Writers Hans Christian Andersen, Honore de Balzac, James Barrie, William Faulkner (H), F. Scott Fitzgerald (H), Ernest Hemingway (H, S), Hermann Hesse (H, SA), Henrik Ibsen, Henry James, William James, Samuel Clemens (Mark Twain), Joseph Conrad (SA), Charles Dickens, Isak Dinesen (SA), Ralph Waldo Emerson, Herman Melville, Eugene O'Neill (H, SA), Mary Shelley, Robert Louis Stevenson, Leo Tolstoy, Tennessee Williams (H), Mary Wollstonecraft (SA), Virginia Woolf (H, S) Composers Hector Berlioz (SA), Anton Bruckner (H), George Frederic Handel, Gustav Holst, Charles Ives, Gustav Mahler, Modest Mussorgsky, Sergey Rachmaninoff, Giocchino Rossini, Robert Schumann (H, SA), Alexander Scriabin, Peter Tchaikovsky Nonclassical composers and musicians Irving Berlin (H), Noel Coward, Stephen Foster, Charles Mingus (H), Charles Parker (H, SA), Cole Porter (H) Poets William Blake, Robert Burns, George Gordon, Lord Byron, Samuel Taylor Coleridge, Hart Crane (S) , Emily Dickinson, T.S. Eliot (H), Oliver Goldsmith, Gerard Manley Hopkins, Victor Hugo, Samuel Johnson, John Keats, Vachel Lindsay (S), James Russell Lowell, Robert Lowell (H), Edna St. Vincent Millay (H), Boris Pasternak (H), Sylvia Plath (H, S), Edgar Allan Poe (SA), Ezra Pound (H), Anne Sexton (H, S), Percy Bysshe Shelley (SA), Alfred, Lord Tennyson, Dylan Thomas, Walt Whitman Artists Richard Dadd (H), Thomas Eakins, Paul Gauguin (SA), Vincent van Gogh (H, S), Ernst Ludwig Kirchner (H, S), Edward Lear, Michelangelo, Edvard Meunch (H), Georgia O'Keeffe (H),2 George Romney, Dante Gabriel Rossetti (SA) DIAGNOSIS DSM-IV-TR Five types of episodes Four subtypes Four severity levels Three course specifiers American Psychiatric Association. (2000). Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders-Fourth Edition-Text Revision. Washington, DC: Author. Manic Episode Symptoms: Inflated self-esteem or grandiosity 2. Decreased need for sleep 3. Pressured speech or more talkative than usual 4. Flight of ideas or racing thoughts 5. Distractibility 6. Psychomotor agitation or increase in goaldirected activity 7. Hedonistic interests 1. Hypomanic Episode Similarities with Manic Episode = Same symptoms Differences = Length of time Impairment not as severe Hypomanic Episode Similarities with Manic Episode = Same symptoms Differences = Length of time Impairment not as severe Major Depressive Episode Symptoms: 1. Depressed mood (in children can be irritable) 2. Diminished interest in activities 3. Significant weight loss or gain 4. Insomnia or hypersomnia 5. Psychomotor agitation or retardation 6. Fatigue/loss of energy 7. Feelings of worthlessness/inappropriate guilt 8. Diminished ability to think or concentrate/indecisiveness 9. Suicidal ideation or suicide attempt Mixed Episode Both Manic and Major Depressive Episode criteria are met nearly every day for a least a one week period. Subtypes Bipolar Disorder I = more classic form; clear episodes of depression & mania Bipolar Disorder II = presents with less intense and often unrecognized manic phases Cyclothymia = chronic moods of hypomania & depression, often evolves into a more serious type Bipolar Disorder Not Otherwise Specified (NOS) = largest group of individuals EPIDEMIOLOGY Prevalence Estimated between 3-6% Subsyndromal bipolar disorder Equal distribution across gender variables Average age @ onset = 20 years old Course Initial cycle typically major depressive episode Recovery Relapse Rapid Cycling Rapid cycling=4 episodes/year Ultrarapid cycling=5-364 episodes/year Ultradian cycling=>365 episodes/year Age at Onset Pediatric, prepubertal, or early adolescent (prior to age 12) Adolescent (12 - 18 years) Adult onset (+ 18 years) IMPAIRMENTS Comorbidity Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD) Between 60-80% Criteria Comparison Bipolar Disorder (mania) 1. 2. 3. More talkative than usual, or pressure to keep talking Distractibility Increase in goal directed activity or psychomotor agitation ADHD Often talks excessively Is often easily distracted by extraneous stimuli Is often “on the go” or often acts as if “driven by a motor” Differentiation= elated mood, grandiosity, decreased need for sleep, hypersexuality, and irritable mood. Comorbidity (cont.) Oppositional Defiant Disorder (ODD) & Conduct Disorder (CD) Substance Abuse 70-75% 40-50% Anxiety Disorders 35-40% Suicidal Behaviors Prevalence of suicide attempts 40-45% Age of first attempt Multiple attempts Severity of attempts Suicidal ideation Cognitive Deficits Executive Functions Attention Memory Sensory-Motor Integration Nonverbal Problem-Solving Academic Deficits Mathematics Psychosocial Deficits Relationships Peers Family members Recognition and Regulation of Emotion Social Problem-Solving Self-Esteem Impulse Control TREATMENT APPROACHES Psychopharmacological DEPRESSION Mood Stabilizers Anti-Obsessional MANIA Mood Stabillizers Aypical Antipsychotics Anti-Depressant Anti-Anxiety Atypical Antipsychotics Lithium: Pharmacology • Not liver metabolized. Kidney excreted • Not protein bound • 70-80% reabsorb prox Tubule, Na comp: Na (dehydr, thiazide diuret) Li level • Excretion related to GFR:elder preg • Half-life 24 hrs (HS), steady state 5 days • Peak Levels 2 hrs, SR 4-4.5 – fast release: N/V, slow rel: diarrhea Predictors: Good Li Response • • • • • Past Li response (personal or family) Euphoric, pure (classic) mania Sequence Mania-Depr-Euthymia No psychosis No Rapid Cycling Predictors: Poor Li Response [Good response to anticonvulsants] • • • • • • • Mixed mania (adolescents) Irritable mania Secondary mania (geriatric) Psychotic Sx Rapid Cycling Depression-Mania-Euthymia Comorbid substance abuse Lithium: Common Side Effects • • • • • • • GI distress: upper LiCO3, lower GI SR. Polyuria / polydipsia Sedation-lethargy Cognitive (memory, concentr, slow) Wt. Gain Poor coordination, tremor Skin (worse acne) Lithium: Serious SE • Renal – nephrogenic diabetes insipidus – tubular interstitial nephritis • • • • Hypothyroidism Psoriasis (onset or worsening) Cardiac: EKG flat T, SA dysfx, tachicardia Li Tox. N/V/D, delirium, ataxia, stupor – Tx dyalisis if >3.0, correct fluid-electrolites Li: Interactions & Use Li levels: • diuretics, • NSAIDs (ASA OK) • ACE-inhibitors • Starting: – Baseline Renal, TFT, HCG, EKG, UA, weight, medical Hx – 300-600 mg/day divided doses – Levels in 5 days – Increase 300-900 mg/day q 5-7 days Valproate • FDA Sz ‘78, BP ‘96 • Effective antimanic, BP depression • Therapeutic effect 2 d. level 50-125 mg/l – oral loading 20-30 mg/kg/day • Elderly & hypomania responde to lower? • Mixed, rapid cycling, schizoaffective Valproate • FDA Sz ‘78, BP ‘96 • Effective antimanic, BP depression • Therapeutic effect 2 d. level 50-125 mg/l – oral loading 20-30 mg/kg/day • Elderly & hypomania responde to lower? • Mixed, rapid cycling, schizoaffective Valproate • Increases GABA levels • Effects 2nd Messenger, Prot-Kinase-C • 80-95 % Protein bound • Liver Metabolized p450 (inhibitor) • Half life 8-17 hrs VPA: Common Side Effects • • • • • • • • GI distress Sedation Liver transaminase elevation Tremor Hair loss Weight gain-increased appetite Thrombocitopenia (elders) Teratogenic: neural tube, cranio-facial VPA: Less Common SE • Neutropenia • Coagulopathies, platelet Function • endocrine abnormalities – Amenorrhea, policystic ovary? – Hypothyroidism – Hypocortisolemia VPA: Rare Dangerous SE • Idiosincratic Hepatic Failure – lethargy, anorexia, N/V, bleed, edema – Risk: <2 yo, many anticonvuls, Dev. Delay – Remote risk in >10yo psychiatric patients • Acute Hemorrhagic Pancreatitis • Bone Marrow Supression VPA Use • Baseline: – Medical Hx, CBC-diff, LFT (LDH, SGOT, SGPT, bili, Alk. Phos, GGT), HCG, PT,PTT if bleeding abnorm, amylase? – Warn about hepatic, pancreatic, hematologic, teratogenic risks • Load 20 mg/kg/day, lower outpt hypom • Level 50-120 (check in 1-5 days) • Monitor LFT, CBC Carbamazepine Effective antimanic, Tx-refract Depr • Onset 2 wks, antidepr 4-6 wk • Ther. Levels: 4-12 or 15 mg/L • Half life decreases to 12-17 hrs – p450 liver induction CBZ: Side Effects • Less cognitive probl than Li • Less Wt gain, hair loss, tremor than VPA • Neuro: Diplopia,blurr vision, fatigue/sed • GI: Naus/diarr, Dry mouth • Leukopenia, thrombocitopenia, rash LFT • Agranulocytosis (, Liver fail, pancreatitis, Stevens-Johnson (exfol skin), neuroteratogenic CBZ: Interactions (Many) • p450 induction, CBZlevels of: CBZ, VPA, lamotrig, TCAs, prednisone, theophiline, warfarin, benzos, & oral contraceptives • p450 inhibitors: acetazolamide, Cachanne blockers [diltiazem & verapamil, but not nifedipine], danazol, erythromycin, fluoxetine, isoniazid, VPA all CBZ levels CBZ: Use • Baseline: Medical Hx, CBC+diff,LFT, Renal, TFT, HCG, ferritin • Start low: – 100-400 mg/day, 100-200 mg every several days, bid (occasionally qd) • Follow CBC, LFT – clinical monitoring more effective than labs Therapy Psychoeducation Family Interventions Cognitive-Behavioral Therapy RAINBOW Program Interpersonal and Social Rhythm Therapy Schema-focused Therapy Biological mechanisms Macro Micro MACRO Which parts of the brain are relevant to BP ▲ volumes amygdala ↑ at later phases of the disease (drugs ?) (Strakowski, 2012) ↓ at the first episode (Bitter, 2011) VPC and striatum ↓ volume inversely correlated with age (Blumberg 2006; Sanches, 2009) Key points Subtle abnormalities in the brains of BP Preservation of total cerebral volume with regional grey and white matter changes in prefrontal, midline and limbic networks limits Findings are not consitent Medications Illness duration Sample sizes Img studies do not test the “activity” per se but a ▲ of the activity in ≠ experimental conditions neurodevelopment BP begins in late adolescence BP is progressive pruning Increased brain volumes in prefrontal and parahippocampal cortices Red → frontal Black → parietal Purple → termporal Occipital → green MICRO Which molecular cascades are relevant to BD ? Wnt IP GSK3 Wnt IP GSK3 Axon guidance, planar cell position A network of proteins: signals from receptors to DNA expression Controls beta-catenin (turns on the expression of genes): Wnt: ▲ phosphorylation of beta-catenin → ▲ degradation Wnt IP GSK3 Inositol phosphates are a group of mono- to polyphosphorylated inositols. They act as second messangers for cell growth, apoptosis, cell migration, endocytosis, and cell differentiation Wnt IP GSK3 GSK3 is a widely influential enzyme that is capable of phosphorylating, and thereby regulating, over forty known substrates. serotonergic, dopaminergic, cholinergic, and glutamatergic systems control the activity of GSK3 neural plasticity, neurogenesis, gene expression, and the ability of neurons to respond to stressful, potentially lethal, conditions are modulated by GSK3 Oxidative stress