Childhood Bullying and Maltreatment Yield A Worse Course of Bipolar Illness
Highlights from the International Society for Bipolar Disorders Conference Posters and Presentations, Chicago, June 22-25, 2023
Georgina Hosang of Bart’s & The London, Queen Mary’s School of Medicine reported that bullying and maltreatment together were associated with more suicidal behaviors than either childhood experience alone.
Positive Effects of Low-Dose Lithium (LDL)
Highlights from the International Society for Bipolar Disorders Conference Posters and Presentations, Chicago, June 22-25, 2023
Rebecca Strawbridge of the Institute of Psychiatry, Psychology & Neuroscience, King’s College London reported on 18 articles that were examined and grouped according to outcome domain (cognition, depression, mania, and related constructs e.g., suicidality). Significant benefits (versus placebo) were identified for attenuating cognitive decline, and potentially as an adjunctive therapy for people with depression/mania. Across studies, LDL (~serum level ?0.6 mmol/L) was reported to be safe.
Lumateperone for Bipolar I or Bipolar II Depression: Few Extrapyramidal and Motor Symptoms
Highlights from the International Society for Bipolar Disorders Conference Posters and Presentations, Chicago, June 22-25, 2023
Tobie Escher of Intra-Cellular Therapies, Inc. reported on the excellent tolerability of lumateperone (42mg/day) in a “short-term population comprised 746 patients in pooled monotherapy trials (placebo, 374; lumateperone, 372) and 352 patients in the adjunctive study (adjunctive placebo, 175; adjunctive lumateperone, 177). Reported EPS [extrapyramidal symptom]-related TEAEs [treatment-emergent adverse events] were 1 patient (0.3%) with mild dyskinesia (lumateperone monotherapy), 1 (0.6%) with mild akathisia (adjunctive lumateperone), and 1 (0.3%) with severe akathisia (placebo monotherapy).”
Patterns of Pharmacotherapy for Bipolar Disorder
Highlights from the International Society for Bipolar Disorders Conference Posters and Presentations, Chicago, June 22-25, 2023
Balwinder Singh of the Mayo Clinic College of Medicine reported on “10,351 individuals from North America (n=3,985), Europe (n=3,822), and Australia (n=2,544), predominantly with cross-sectional data (80%)….They found that “Cross-sectionally, mood-stabilizing anticonvulsants (44%), second-generation antipsychotics (42%), and antidepressants (38%) were most prescribed. Lithium was prescribed in 29% of patients, primarily in Australian (31%) and European (36%) cohorts.” Lithium is remarkedly underutilized in North American cohorts.
Both Obesity and Bipolar Disorders in 2249 Individuals Show White Matter Microstructure Abnormalities
Lorielle Dietze of Dalhousie University “obtained body mass index (BMI) and diffusion tensor imaging derived fractional anisotropy (FA) values from 930 individuals with bipolar disorders (BD), and 1319 control individuals from 20 cohorts in the ENIGMA-BD Working Group.”
They “found that lower FA was associated with both BD and BMI, in five white matter tracts, including the corpus callosum and thalamic radiation. Nine ROIs were correlated with only BD, while higher BMI was uniquely correlated with lower FA in four white matter ROIs.”
They concluded: “For the first time we showed that both obesity and BD demonstrated lower FA in some of the same regions. The impact of obesity may be greater in some tracts in BD individuals.”
Beneficial Cognitive Effects of Transcranial Infrared Laser Stimulation (TILS) in Bipolar Disorder
Highlights from the International Society for Bipolar Disorders Conference Posters and Presentations, Chicago, June 22-25, 2023
Michael Gentry of The University of Texas At Austin reported on 30 individuals with remitted bipolar disorder (type I or type II). TILS was administered weekly to each participant over six consecutive weeks (1064 nm wavelength; bilaterally to the frontal poles; 10 minutes per weekly session)….. after six weeks of TILS administration, participants demonstrated decreased impulsivity on the Stop Signal Task and improved abilities to select correct responses on the Multitasking Test.
Cognitive Function and White Matter Integrity in Individuals With Bipolar Disorder
Highlights from Posters Presented at the Society of Biological Psychiatry Meeting, April 27-29, 2023 in San Diego
Jennifer McDowell reported that they found “significantly reduced FA (fractional anisotropy) values in 85 bipolar probands compared to 66 controls” in multiple (n=8) white matter tracts. There were significantly lower scores in bipolar probands compared to controls on composite scores, ( p = 0.007), verbal fluency, ( p < 0.001), and symbol coding, (p = 0.023). They concluded that: “ Impacted connectivity in critical fiber tracts may be key to understanding the neural underpinnings of deficits, like cognition, observed in this clinical population.”
Editors note: It is of interest that lithium has been shown to normalize some white matter abnormalities in youngsters and help preserve cognitive function in older individuals. On this and many other accounts, way too little lithium is being used in the treatment of patients with bipolar disorder. Lithium not only increases neurogenesis (new grey matter neurons) and hippocampal volume, but also has positive effects on white matter tracts and even increases the length of one’s telomeres (which keeps you more healthy). In other ungrammatical words, “If your brain is not connected right, it don’t work right.”
Greater Severity of Depression in Youth With Bipolar Disorder versus Unipolar Depression
Highlights from the International Society for Bipolar Disorders Conference Posters and Presentations, Chicago, June 22-25, 2023
Aaron Silverman of the University of Toronto, CAMH found that “youth (age 13-21) with [Bipolar Disorders] compared to those with [unipolar] depression had significantly higher (more severe) ratings on depressed mood (p = .001), irritability (p = .037), anhedonia (p = .004), negative self-image (p < .001), hopelessness (p = .04), fatigue (p = .001), hypersomnia (p = .001), suicidal ideation (p = .04), and recurrent thoughts of death (p < .001).”
Intravenous Arketamine As Adjunctive Treatment for Bipolar Depression
Highlights from Posters Presented at the Society of Biological Psychiatry Meeting, April 27-29, 2023 in San Diego
I.D. Bandeira of Stanford University reported on the feasibility and safety of the (R)-enantiomer of ketamine (arketamine) in treating six patients with bipolar depression: “Subjects received two intravenous infusions of arketamine of 0.5mg/kg, followed by 1mg/kg one week later.” Patients improved after the first dose and after “1mg/kg dose, the mean MADRS [Montgomery–Åsberg Depression Rating Scale] total score before the second infusion was 32.0, which dropped to 17.66 after 24h (p<0.001).” All individuals tolerated both doses, exhibiting no dissociative or manic symptoms.
LITHIUM’S AMAZING DIVERSITY OF ASSETS
Editor’s Note: Lithium is vastly underutilized. There is wide spread ignorance about its many assets and misconceptions about its few side effects. Here is an update that should be of interest to potential users, family members, and clinicians.
Lithium:
- Prevents unipolar and bipolar depression
- Augments effects of antidepressants in unipolar depression
- Potentiates the effects of atypical antipsychotics in treating mania and depression
- Reduces inflammation
- Normalizes some aspects of cardiovascular risk
- Normalizes secretions for monocytes and leukocytes
- Increases neurogenesis, BCl-2, and hippocampal and thalamic volumes
- The increases in neuroprotective factors occurs at brain levels below typical therapeutic dosages
- Protects against memory deterioration
- Lowers dementia risk in old age
- Reduces suicide clinically and at minute concentrations in the water supply
- Lengthens telomeres and increases longevity
- Reduces size of lesions in models of stroke, AIDS, and Huntington’s chorea
- Normalizes circadian rhythms
- Reduces manic-like behavior induced by clock gene mutations
- Prevents calcium currents and increased firing rate in stem cells from bipolar patients
- Induces minimal to no weight gain on long term follow up
- Does not increase risk of kidney failure when given at blood levels of .6 to .8 blood levels
- Protects against spine and hip osteoporosis
Conclusion: With so many assets and so few liabilities, physicians and patients should reconsider the benefits of lithium and use it more often, not only in the few who respond to it as a monotherapy, but as a adjunct to the many other treatments of bipolar disorder. This should be a “no brainer” as lithium will very likely help some have fewer problems from their illness and may even help them live longer.
Many of these points are summarized in the open access publication: Robert M Post, The New News About Lithium: An Underutilized Treatment in The United States, Neuropsychopharmacology accepted article preview 4 October 2017; several new updates have been added from the International Society on Bipolar Disorders meeting, Chicago, June, 2023.