Author:
Bond David J.,da Silveira Leonardo Evangelista,MacMillan Erin L.,Torres Ivan J.,Lang Donna J.,Su Wayne,Honer William G.,Lam Raymond W.,Yatham Lakshmi N.
Abstract
BackgroundWe previously reported that patients with early-stage bipolar disorder,
but not healthy comparison controls, had body mass index (BMI)-related
volume reductions in limbic brain areas, suggesting that the structural
brain changes characteristic of bipolar disorder were more pronounced
with increased weight.AimsTo determine whether the most consistently reported neurochemical
abnormality in bipolar disorder, increased glutamate/glutamine (Glx), was
also more prominent with higher BMI.MethodWe used single-voxel proton magnetic resonance spectroscopy to measure
hippocampal Glx in 51 patients with first-episode mania (mean BMI = 24.1)
and 28 healthy controls (mean BMI = 23.3).ResultsIn patients, but not healthy controls, linear regression demonstrated
that higher BMI predicted greater Glx. Factorial ANCOVA showed a
significant BMI×diagnosis interaction, confirming a distinct effect of
weight on Glx in patients.ConclusionsTogether with our volumetric studies, these results suggest that higher
BMI is associated with more pronounced structural and neurochemical
limbic brain changes in bipolar disorder, even in early-stage patients
with low obesity rates.
Publisher
Royal College of Psychiatrists
Subject
Psychiatry and Mental health
Cited by
17 articles.
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