Higher Brain Temperature in Youth Bipolar Disorder Using a Novel Magnetic Resonance Imaging Approach

Highlights from Posters Presented at the Society of Biological Psychiatry Meeting, April 27-29, 2023 in San Diego

Ben Goldstein of the University of Toronto reported that “Brain temperature was significantly higher in BD (bipolar youth) compared to CG (control group) in the precuneus. Higher ratio of brain temperature-to-CBF [cerebral blood flow] was significantly associated with greater depression symptom severity in both the ACC [anterior cingulate cortex] and precuneus within BD.”

These finding are of particular interest in light of the Unspecified Bipolar Disorder subtype called Temperature and Sleep Dysregulation Disorder (TSDD), where patients are over heated and respond to clonidine and other cooling techniques along with lithium and repeated intranasal ketamine insufflations.

Cannabis Use Disorder Increases Risk of Subsequent Unipolar Depression and Bipolar Disorder

Jefsen et al report in JAMA Psychiatry. that in “[6,651,765] individuals in Demark, cannabis use disorder was associated with an increased risk of (subsequent) both psychotic and nonpsychotic unipolar depression and bipolar disorder….Associations between CUD and subsequent affective disorders were estimated as hazard ratios (HRs) using Cox proportional hazards regression with time-varying information on CUD, adjusting for sex; alcohol use disorder; substance use disorder; having been born in Denmark; calendar year; parental educational level (highest attained); parental cannabis, alcohol, or substance use disorders; and parental affective disorders….Cannabis use was associated with an increased risk of bipolar disorder in men (HR, 2.96; ) and women (HR, 2.54; )”, and was highest for psychotic bipolar disorder (HR, 4.05; 95% CI, 3.52-4.65).

Editors Note: Marijuana is not a benign substance. “In all, 60,?696 individuals received a diagnosis of (cannabis use disorder) during follow-up, and 260,?746 (3.9%) developed an affective disorder.”

DRAMATIC PROPHYLACTIC RESPONSE TO NIMODIPINE: A Case Report

(This is an invited contribution by Robert Westhead.)

This 50 year old man had a lifetime of incapacitating rapid cycling (10 days up and 10 days down) bipolar I disorder, but then for the past 4 years has had a complete remission on nimodipine (60mg QID). He remains on lithium (800mg), and of his other long-term medications, he has titrated quetiapine down from 800mg to 50mg and has discontinued phenelzine.

He had previously failed to respond to combinations of:

· Lithium

· Anticonvulsant mood stabilizers (including divalproex sodium, lamotrigine, carbamazepine and pregablin)

· Atypical antipsychotics (including quetiapine, aripiprazole and lurasidone)

· Antidepressants (including SSRIs eg citalopram and sertraline, NSRIs eg venlaflaxine and mirtazapine, and a MAOI eg phenelzine)

· Thyroxine

· Propranolol

· Clonazepam

He wanted to highlight this dramatic response to nimodipine in combination with lithium as this dihydropyridine calcium channel blocker is not well known or frequently used for its prophylactic effectiveness.

He noted that as well as stopping the rapid cycling, the nimodipine has provided complete relief from comorbid social anxiety symptoms and remediated cognitive and memory impairment.

This response to nimodipine potentially also has pathophysiological implications. Nimodipine directly blocks the CACNA1C calcium influx gene that has repeatedly been associated with vulnerability to depression, bipolar disorder, and schizophrenia in gene wide association studies. This patient does not know whether he carries this gene variant, but assays for it are routinely available as performed by the company Genomind.

Thus, it remains an open question as to whether those who have the CACNA1C variant would be more responsive to nimodipine compared to those without the variant. Certainly, the efficacy of this agent in treatment of patients with bipolar disorder deserves further consideration and study.

Obesity is associated with reduce cortical thickness in bipolar disorders

Sean R. McWhinney et al reported in Psychological Medicine (2023) that obesity was associated with reduced cortical thickness (but not surface area) in most areas of the brain in 2832 participants.

Editors Note: Patients and clinicians should try to prevent and reduce weight gain using the best tolerated medications from the outset and helping with weight loss by various measures. These can include the anticonvulsants topiramated and zonisamine, the combination of bupropion and naltrexone, and the use of new anti-diabetic drugs such as Jardiance and Farxiga that have weight loss (greater than with metformin) as a side effect. Prescribing a good diet and regular exercise is also indicated. Reducing obesity will likely make you live longer and maybe could even make you smarter.

Inflammatory marker CRP predicts worse course of adolescent bipolar disorder

March 1, 2023 · Posted in C – May become important in the future · Comment 

Sudhir Karthikeyan in Ben Goldstein’s lab in Toronto reported in  Brain Behav Immun (2022) that in 79 adolescents the inflammatory marker CRP (C-Reactive Protein) was higher and the anti-inflammatory cytokine Il-10 was lower during the most ill periods compared to normal volunteers. “Moreover, higher CRP levels (p = 0.009) at intake predicted greater time to recovery from the index symptomatic episode.”  They concluded that: “In the first repeated-measures study on this topic in adolescents with BD, we found evidence that CRP, an inexpensive and ubiquitous blood test, may be useful in predicting the prospective course of BD symptoms. “

Sleep Disturbances in Pediatric Bipolar NOS is the Same as in BP I 

Gianni Faedda reported in Frontiers in Psychiatry (2012) that decreased need for sleep is as prominent in BP NOS children as in those with BP I.  So it appears that with the exception of only brief periods of mania in BP NOS, these children have similar characteristics to those with full blown BP I.  Thus in addition to the briefer periods of mania, one should be on the look out for all the symptoms of bipolar disorder that are not typical of ADHD, including brief or extended periods of euphoria, decreased need for sleep, more extreme degrees of irritability and poor frustration tolerance, hallucination, delusions, suicidal and homicidal ideation, more severe depression, and increases in sexual interest and actions.  When these are present, the bipolar mood instability should  be treated first and only then small doses of psychomotor stimulants can be used to treat what ever residual ADHD remains.  The typical symptoms of ADHD are very of present and comorbid in childhood onset bipolar disorder and cannot be used to discriminate the two diagnoses.  The children with BP NOS are as dysfunctional as those with BP I and take longer to stabilize, so pharmacological treatment may need to be intensive, multimodal, and supplemented by Family Focused Therapy (FFT) or a related family therapy.  It is most often not conceptualized as such, but BP NOS as well as BP I should be considered as a medical emergency and handled by a sophisticated pediatrician and/or referred for psychiatric consultation and therapy.  The longer bipolar disorder is not treated, the worse the outcome is in adulthood.

Two different subtypes of early onset unspecified bipolar disorder (USBD)

The first subtype is classical BP NOS (Not Otherwise Specified) having all the characteristics of full-blown bipolar disorder except for only having brief durations of mania and responding to conventional treatment. The second is what is now called Temperature and Sleep Dysregulation Disorder (TSDD) and was formerly described by D. Papolos as the Fear of Harm (FOH) syndrome, and requires a different treatment approach.

Clinicians should be alert to unique symptoms in children who might have TSDD as such a diagnosis would lead to a unconventional treatment paradigm. We emphasize the importance of specifically asking parents about evidence of over heating (red face and red ears) and high tolerance for cold (going outside markedly under-dressed) and the presence of fear of sleep and horrific nightmares, as these may lead one to consider the diagnosis of TSDD.

If these two novel aspects (temperature and sleep dysregulation) occur in the presentation of a highly fearful and behaviorally dysregulated child with bipolar-like symptoms, these may lead to the consideration of an unconventional treatment paradigm. It utilizes 1) high dose lithium; 2) clonidine and other practical approaches to achieve cooling and relieve over heating; and 3) ascending doses of intranasal ketamine (as described by Papolos et al 2013; 2018). This may be of considerable clinical importance as a large group of children with this unique presentation respond very poorly to conventional treatments for bipolar disorder and remain highly impaired and dysfunction throughout their childhood and adolescence.

If these children instead are treated with: lithium (to achieve blood levels of 1.0 meq/L or higher); clonidine (0.1- 0.3mg IR and 0.1mg ER at noon and HS) and other practical ways to achieve cooling; followed by ascending intranasal doses of ketamine (starting at 20mg and increasing toward 80-260mg/day, repeated every 2-3 days), marked improvement can be achieved. This occurs in conjunction with ketamine’s positive effects on fear and aggressive behaviors in association with its ability to reduce core body temperature.

We highlight this potential alternative treatment approach as long term positive effects have been achieved with it in open case series (Papolos et al 2013; 2018 ). The efficacy of this treatment approach has not been validated in controlled clinical trials, but we believe wider recognition of the two subtypes of USBD– BPNOS and TSDD,– will lead to more systematic research on treatment. Actively looking for the unique features of TSDD and pursuing its unconventional treatment may lead to long term positive effects in a child previously viewed as having an intractable psychiatric illness.

Lithium is a Lifesaver in Bipolar Disorder

Batya Swift Yasgur MA, LSW reported in Medscape Medical News on November 28, 2022 that “Mood stabilizers protect against suicide and all-cause mortality in patients with bipolar disorder (BD), including natural mortality, with lithium emerging as the most protective agent, new research suggests.

Investigators led by Pao-Huan Chen, MD, of the Department of Psychiatry, Taipei Medical University Hospital, Taiwan, evaluated the association between the use of mood stabilizers and the risks for all-cause mortality, suicide, and natural mortality in over 25,000 patients with BD and found that those with BD had higher mortality.

However, they also found that patients with BD had a significantly decreased adjusted 5-year risk of dying from any cause, suicide, and natural causes. Lithium was associated with the largest risk reduction compared with the other mood stabilizers.

Lumateperone Improves Bipolar Depression Symptoms

February 18, 2021 · Posted in Potential Treatments · Comment 
elderly woman

At a recent scientific meeting, Suresh Durgam of Intra-Cellular Therapies, Inc. reported on a study of lumateperone tosylate for the treatment of bipolar depression. Lumateperone tosylate is a mechanistically novel antipsychotic that has been approved by the US Food and Drug Administration for the treatment of schizophrenia.

In a double-blind, placebo-controlled study, the drug showed efficacy in bipolar I and II depression. In a 6-week study, 377 patients received either 42 mg/day of lumateperone or placebo, and 333 (87.4%) completed treatment. Lumateperone treatment significantly improved total scores on the Montgomery Asberg Depression Rating Scale (MADRS) compared with placebo. Item analysis revealed that 8 of 10 MADRS items improved significantly in comparison with placebo by day 29, and all items did by day 43. The largest effects were in reported sadness, apparent sadness, inner tension and reduced sleep. Durgam and colleagues concluded that lumateperone at a dose of 42mg improves a broad range of symptoms in bipolar I and bipolar II depression.

Sunovion Drug in Development Targets 5HT7 and D2 Receptors to Treat Bipolar Depression

February 8, 2021 · Posted in Potential Treatments · Comment 
Depressed woman

At a recent meeting, President and CEO of Sunovion Pharmaceuticals Antony Loebel presented the results of a recent double-blind, placebo controlled study of a drug in development for the treatment of bipolar depression, currently known as SEP-4199. The drug has a fixed ratio of 85% aramisulpride and 15% esamisulpride that target serotonin 5-HT7 receptors and dopamine D2 receptors, respectively. The drug was optimized to amplify the antidepressant effects that come from affecting 5-HT7 while minimizing D2-related side effects.

A total of 344 patients were randomized into three equal groups, in which patients received placebo or a fixed dose of SEP-4199, either 200mg/day or 400mg/day.

The results were promising. After 6 weeks, scores on the Montgomery Asberg Depression Rating Scale (MADRS) were higher among patients who received SEP-4199. The results were very close to statistical significance (p=0.054), with the placebo group showing a large improvement that may have contributed to the lack of difference across groups. In each dosage group, there was greater improvement in MADRS scores than was seen in the placebo group. There was also greater improvement on the Quick Inventory of Depression Symptomatology (QIDS-SR-16) and on the Hamilton Anxiety Rating Scale (HAM-A) in each dosage group compared to placebo.

Loebel concluded that the results showed proof of concept for the use of SEP-4199 to treat bipolar depression, and they plan to continue their research on the drug.

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