Literature DB >> 18689286

Cognitive neuroscience and brain imaging in bipolar disorder.

Luke Clark1, Barbara J Sahakian.   

Abstract

Bipolar disorder is characterized by a combination of state-related changes in psychological function that are restricted to illness episodes, coupled with trait-related changes that persist through periods of remission, irrespective of symptom status. This article reviews studies that have investigated the brain systems involved in these state- and trait-related changes, using two techniques: (i) indirect measures of neurocognitive function, and (ii) direct neuroimaging measures of brain function during performance of a cognitive task. Studies of neurocognitive function in bipolar disorder indicate deficits in three core domains: attention, executive function, and emotional processing. Functional imaging studies implicate pathophysiology in distributed neural circuitry that includes the prefrontal and anterior cingulate cortices, as well as subcortical limbic structures including the amygdala and the ventral striatum. Whilst there have been clear advances in our understanding of brain changes in bipolar disorder, there are limited data in bipolar depression, and there is limited understanding of the influence of clinical variables including medication status, illness severity, and specific symptom dimensions.

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Year:  2008        PMID: 18689286      PMCID: PMC3181872     

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Dialogues Clin Neurosci        ISSN: 1294-8322            Impact factor:   5.986


The bipolar states of mania and depression have a clear impact on cognitive function. The clinical criteria for mania include distractibility, inappropriate speech and behavior, increased goal-directed behavior, and a tendency to make decisions associated with potential painful consequences.[1] The depressive state is also characterized by cognitive changes, including a lack of concentration, difficulty making decisions, motor slowing, and changes in memory. Understanding the brain changes that, accompany these illness states is an important target for psychiatric neuroscience, for a number of reasons. The identification of illness markers for bipolar disorder will facilitate the early detection of bipolar episodes, which may spare patients and their families considerable distress. Earlier detection of the illness itself is also of significant, benefit: bipolar disorder continues to be frequently misdiagnosed as Major Depressive Disorder in individuals without, a clear history of manic episodes,[2,3] with the consequence that, patients may be maintained on a suboptimal medication regime until their bipolar diathesis is noticed. Second, characterizing the profile of brain dysfunction in bipolar disorder will also help identify novel targets for pharmacological treatment, and may eventually allow identification of individuals at high risk for developing bipolar disorder. Third, the assessment of cognitive performance in patients with bipolar disorder can also be useful in the management of individual patients, in order to assess functional capacity (eg, ability to concentrate or problem-solve), and to chart, progressive changes occurring with advancing chronicity, acute treatment, or prophylactic medication. The purpose of the present, article is to summarize psychological and ncurobiological studies that, have sought, to characterize the profile of brain dysfunction in bipolar disorder. In the first, part of the review, we will examine the evidence from studies of neurocognition in bipolar disorder. Neuropsychological testing with standardized assessment, procedures can provide indirect, measures of activity in brain systems, based on validatory research from neuroimaging, studies of human lesion patients, and translational data from nonhuman species.[4] Although the index of underlying brain function is indirect, the advantage of this approach is that neuropsychological testing is relatively inexpensive, and can be readily administered in a clinical or hospital setting. In the second part of the review, we will examine studies that have used brain imaging techniques, chiefly functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI),to directly quantify the neural abnormalities associated with bipolar disorder. Investigation of the profile of brain changes in bipolar disorder has been hampered by a number of factors. First, it has become apparent that, in bipolar disorder, there is a combination of both state-related changes during illness episodes, and more enduring trait-related changes which persist, through periods of symptom remission.[5] This accumulating evidence for trait deficits in bipolar disorder contrasts with the original Kraepelinian concept, of bipolar disorder, which highlighted the apparent recovery of function between episodes (in contrast to the chronic deteriorating course of schizophrenia dementia praecox). Of course, the identification of trait markers for bipolar disorder raises the possibility that neurocognitive variables may represent illness endophenotypes, related to underlying genetic liability.[6] A second complication pertains to the state-related changes: whilst, the manic and depressive states of bipolar disorder have some neuropsychological similarities, they also have some important differences. For example, the florid disinhibition and risk-taking during mania are highly reminiscent, of the effects of brain lesions to the orbitofrontal cortex, as we will discuss further below. A related third point, is that, multiple domains of cognitive function are clearly disrupted in bipolar disorder, including attention, executive function, emotional processing, and memory,[7-8] and these cognitive domains may be differentially affected by state and trait variables. Finally, the current, literature on bipolar disorder has failed to consistently control for a range of clinical factors that may putatively impact, on neurocognition, including medication status,[9] comorbidities including substance use disorders,[10] and specific symptom dimensions such as suicidally[11] or insomnia.[12]

Cognition in bipolar disorder

The current, article will focus on three areas of neuropsychological function that have been studied in detail in bipolar disorder: attention, executive function and emotional processing. For in-depth reviews, the reader is referred to refs 7, 8, and 13.

Attention

Attention refers to our ability to selectively and flexibly process some of the information in the environment, at the expense of other information. The attcntional system of the human brain can be decomposed into several distinct, mechanisms, including those responsible for selective attention, attentional shifting, and sustained attention.[14] The former two processes have considerable overlap with executive function, and will be considered in the following section. Sustained attention has been widely studied in bipolar disorder, and relates to the capacity to maintain selective processing over prolonged periods of time (“vigilance”). Sustained attention can be measured with continuous performance tests (CPTs) including the Rapid Visual Information Processing task in the Cambridge Neuropsychological Automated Testing Battery (CANTAB) assessment.[15] In these tasks, the subject, must, monitor a stream of stimuli (eg, digits) for target stimuli that are specified by the experimenter. The target, stimuli occur infrequently and unpredictably, and healthy subjects typically show a deterioration in target detection as the task progresses. CPT target, detection is reliably impaired during the manic state,[16,17] and was one of the strongest predictors of the manic state across a wide-ranging neuropsychological assessment.[16] As well as deficits in target detection, manic patients also committed more false alarms - responses to nontargct stimuli.[16,18] This is likely to reflect clinical symptoms of impulsivity and disinhibition in the manic state. The deficit, in target, detection (but not impulsive errors) was shown to persist, in remitted patients with bipolar disorder, albeit at, a somewhat, less severe level compared with mania.[5,19-21] The deficit, in euthymic patients was unrelated to subclinical symptoms,[19,22] which are common in remitted patients and may impact, upon functional capacity and cognitive performance. In fact, after controlling for subclinical symptoms, target detection was the only variable to remain significantly impaired in euthymic cases across a wide-ranging neuropsychological assessment. Target detection impairment, was present in a subset, of patients who were early in the illness course, but, also correlated with disease duration and number of episodes.[19] The sustained attention deficit, in euthymic cases was also present, regardless of the working memory load of the CPT.[23] It, is likely that, the deficit is also exacerbated during depressed states,[24] although, as discussed below, there are currently limited data in bipolar depression.

Executive function

Executive function refers to a collection of higher-level psychological processes that, enable the flexible organization of behavior, including planning, working memory, inhibitory control, strategy development, and attentional shifting.[25] These processes arc intimately associated with the integrity of the prefrontal cortex. Specifically, executive control has been mapped to a lateral prefrontal system comprising the dorsolateral and ventrolateral prefrontal cortices.[26] Executive dysfunction may impact upon functional capacity, that is, patients' ability to complete everyday tasks and work-related activities, and it also impacts more broadly upon quality of life. Patients during a manic episode show significant impairments in a variety of classic measures of executive function, like the Wisconsin Card Sort. Test, the Stroop test, and the Tower of London[27-29] (although notably, the effect size for the deficits was less than for sustained attention and verbal memory in the study by Clark et al).[16] A number of studies have also reported executive impairments in bipolar depression; for example, on the ID-ED task of attentional shifting, which aims to dissect some component processes of the Wisconsin Card Sort, Test.[30] Basso et al[31] reported significant deficits on Verbal Fluency and the Trail Making Test, (part B) in bipolar groups tested in either depressed, manic, or mixed episodes, with no significant differences between groups. A study in unmedicated patients reported significantly worse performance on the Wisconsin Card Sort Test, the Trail Making Test, and the Stroop test in bipolar depressed patients compared with a group of unipolar depressed cases who were matched for duration and severity of illness.[32] These deficits in bipolar depression appear highly sensitive to symptom severity: an earlier study by Sweeney et al[33] compared depressed bipolar, depressed unipolar, and manic bipolar patients on a number of tasks from the CANTAB assessment. Whilst executive deficits were pronounced in the manic patients, the two depressed groups were not, significantly impaired on the Tower of London planning and the ID-ED attentional shifting task. The depressed groups in that, study showed only moderate symptom scores on the HDRS. A recent study in a group of unmedicated depressed patients with bipolar II diagnoses also detected reasonably intact neurocognitive function across measures of executive control, memory, decision-making and impulsivitv,[34] sec also ref 35). Thus, impaired executive function is consistently reported in the manic and depressed states of bipolar disorder, but appears to be highly sensitive to mood state and symptom/illness severity. From these observations, we might, not anticipate executive deficits to persist, in euthymia, and indeed, a number of studies have suggested that executive deficits are not an invariable feature of the recovered state.[10,19-36] However, a number of studies have detected executive deficits in remitted patients, after controlling carefully for residual mood symptoms that, are common in bipolar outpatient populations.[9,37-40] The presence or absence of executive deficits in remitted cohorts may depend upon a variety of clinical factors including illness severity, illness duration, and medication effects. In addition, it is possible that, the size of the battery may affect performance - results in very long test assessments could be attributable to an overriding deficit, in sustained attention rather than executive control.

Emotional processing

Whilst, the dorsal and lateral aspects of the prefrontal cortex are typically associated with relatively “cold” executive processing, the orbital sector of the prefrontal cortex is linked to a distinct set of emotional “hot.” processes including reward evaluation, risky decision-making, and impulse control.[4,41] Following damage to this region, lesion patients typically show changes in emotional behavior, as well as reward-driven and impulsive judgment.[42,43] These changes are highly reminiscent, of some of the behaviors seen during manic episodes, leading to the hypothesis that mania may be selectively associated with a disruption of orbitofrontal function.[16,29-44] In addition, researchers have recently begun to use broader tests of emotion processing in bipolar groups, for example, tasks assessing the recognition of emotional facial expressions.[45-47] In the healthy brain, these emotional tasks recruit a limbic neural system that comprises the orbital and medial parts of the prefrontal cortex (including the subgenual cingulate cortex) as well as subcortical structures including the amygdala and ventral striatum.[48,49] There is accumulating evidence that, patients with bipolar disorder tested in manic states show impaired performance on measures of risk-taking and emotional decision-making. These tasks are based upon gambling scenarios, and have been validated as measures of orbitofrontal cortex integrity through studies in human lesion patients.[50] Clark et al[16] reported a moderate deficit, in mania, on the Iowa Gambling Task, although a recent follow-up study in a larger group of manic patients (n=45) found a more substantial decision-making impairment that was correlated with ratings of (lack of) insight.[51] On the Cambridge Gamble Task, manic patients were found to display poor probabilistic judgment, and increased deliberation times compared with healthy controls.[36] The former deficit was correlated with symptom ratings on the Young Mania. Scale, consistent with a statesensitive marker. During manic episodes, bipolar patients also showed deficits in impulse control on Go-No Go tasks and CPTs, as discussed above. Murphy et al[29] examined performance on an affective variant of the Go-No Go procedure that, used positive and negative-valcnccd words. As well as making more commission errors to No Go stimuli, the manic group also showed a mood-congruent attentional bias, responding faster to the positive words (eg, SUCCESS) than the negative words (eg, GUILT). An affective bias in the opposite direction (ie, preferential processing of negative information) has been demonstrated in major depressive disorder,[52,53] a finding that has also been reported in bipolar depression.[54] Patients with bipolar depression did not show the tendency of manic patients to make more Go-No Go commission errors.[30] In terms of decision-making, our study in bipolar II depression (with a mean MontgomeryAsberg Depression Rating Scale [MADRS] score of 24, in the moderately depressed range) found no effects on the Cambridge Gamble Task.[34] However, a recent study in more severely depressed bipolar I patients (mean Hamilton score of 25) did indicate deficits on this test in probabilistic judgment, and deliberation times,[30] similar to those reported in mania.[44] In euthymic cases, two studies reported intact, performance on the Iowa Gambling Task and the Cambridge Gamble Task,[19,36] and similarly, recognition of emotional facial expressions appears fairly intact during testing in remission.[46,47] Thus, during remission, emotional processing and decision-making functions seem to recover substantially, indicating that these may be predominantly state-related changes. Whether these changes are restricted to the manic state (perhaps indicative of an orbitofrontal ”lesion“ syndrome), or occur in both mania and bipolar depression, is difficult, to ascertain at the current time given the small number of studies examining these processes in bipolar depression.

Brain imaging in bipolar disorder

Structural and functional brain imaging studies in bipolar disorder lend direct, support to the indications of prefrontal cortical pathophysiology from studies of neurocognition. Classic studies of patients with secondary mood disturbance as a consequence of organic pathology like stroke or tumor reported increased prevalence of depressed mood following damage to the left, frontal cortex and the left, basal ganglia.[55,56] Cases of secondary mania arc unsurprisingly less common than poststroke depression, but, are reported to show the reverse pattern of laterality, associated with right-lateralized damage to the frontal cortex and basal ganglia.[57] These data highlight the connectivity between the frontal cortex and basal ganglia, and this frontostriatal circuitry is thought, to support, many aspects of attentional, executive and emotional function.[58] Neurological patients with basal ganglia pathology (eg, Parkinson's disease and Huntington's disease) also show elevated levels of depression, compared with other patient, groups with disorders matched for level of disability[59] In bipolar disorder, structural brain abnormalities in the prefrontal cortex have been confirmed in postmortem studies[60,61] and with structural MRI. For example, the subgenual portion of the anterior cingulate cortex was reduced in volume in patients with bipolar disorder with a family history of affective disorder.[62] Recent, studies using voxel-based morphometry (VBM) have also reported gray-matter reductions in the prefrontal cortex in patients with bipolar disorder.[63-65] In light of the evidence for structural brain changes in prefrontal cortex,the following sections will consider the evidence for changes in functional brain activity in bipolar disorder.

Imaging studies of mania

Data from neurocognitive studies indicate widespread impairments in executive, attentional, and emotional function during the manic phase of bipolar disorder. Functional imaging studies that scanned manic patients at, rest, have indicated changes in blood flow and metabolism, particularly in the orbitofrontal cortex.[62,66-67] The disadvantage of these resting state studies is that it is not, possible to control for thought content during scanning, and increased activity may relate to aspects of the manic state like flights of ideas. Consequently, recent work has scanned patients while they perform a neuropsychological task, in order to investigate task-related neural activity. For example, Rubinsztein et al[68] scanned a small number of manic patients with positron emission tomography while they performed a variant, of the Cambridge Gamble Task in the scanner ( Blocks of a decision-making task were contrasted against blocks of a control task that was matched for visual and motor demands, but, without the requirement, for risk assessment, and decision-making. Compared with demographicallymatched healthy controls, the manic cases showed a dysregulation of medial and ventral prefrontal circuitry during risky decision-making. Using fMRI, Altshuler et al, scanned manic patients during performance of a Go-No Go task that required the suppression of impulsive responses. Compared with matched healthy controls, the manic patients showed blunted activation of the right, lateral orbitofrontal cortex,[69] a region that is thought, to be critical for inhibitory control. The affective variant of the Go-No Go task used by Murphy et al[29] has also been adapted for fMRI by Elliott et al.[70] In a comparison of manic patients and healthy controls, the manic group showed reduced activity in ventrolateral prefrontal cortex during blocks of affective Go-No Go against, a nonemotional control condition. Manic patients also showed evidence of increased activity in the medial orbitofrontal cortex during blocks when positive stimuli were distractors (ie, to be ignored, ( Thus, the available evidence clearly indicates pathophysiology in the ventral, orbital sectors of the prefrontal cortex. This pathophysiology is perhaps better described as a dysregulation, rather than a more simplistic “lesion” account, underlying the changes in emotional processing in the manic state.

Imaging studies of euthymia/remission

A number of studies have examined remitted patients with bipolar disorder in similar imaging protocols to those employed in mania. The Stroop test, where color words (eg, RED) are presented in congruent or incongruent inks, has been widely validated for use in neuroimaging. This paradigm yields a robust signal in the anterior cingulate cortex during presentation of incongruent, stimuli, where the natural tendency to read the color word must, be overriden. Gruber et al[71] reported reduced anterior cingulate activity in remitted bipolar patients compared with controls, which may indicate a failure to recruit prefrontal cortex during effortful executive control.[72-74] Remitted bipolar patients have also been reported to show deactivation in orbital and medial prefrontal cortex during the incongruent Stroop blocks,[72-75] an effect that was also seen in manic and depressed bipolar groups, suggesting a trait, marker of pathophysiology in the orbitofrontal cortex. Other studies using emotional tasks such as recognition of emotional facial expressions have reported abnormally increased subcortical limbic activity in remitted patients with bipolar disorder.[76-77] limbic hyperactivity has also been reported during nonemotional tasks, for example, during performance of a sustained attention task,[78] and a serial reaction time task with implicit sequences.[79] These findings suggest, that patients with bipolar disorder may recruit, emotional (“hot”) neural systems in the processing of emotionally neutral “cold” material. These findings are consistent with studies showing high trait, emotionality in bipolar patients using psychological mood manipulations.[80,81]

Imaging studies of bipolar depression

The limited number of imaging studies in bipolar depression have also highlighted changes in prefrontal and subcortical activity A resting state positron-emission tomography (PET) study in a notably large group (n=43) of patients with bipolar depression reported decreases in prefrontal cortical metabolism, and increases in subcortical metabolism, compared with healthy controls.[82] Both of these effects were correlated with depressive severity on the Hamilton scale. Using cognitive activation designs, decreased activation (or reduced deactivation) in the prefrontal cortex has also been reported, where attentional or executive tasks have been employed.[77] In addition, resting state activation in the subgenual cingulate region was positively correlated with target detection performance on a CPT performed outside the scanner.[83] Decreased blood flow in medial prefrontal cortex was also reported during a sad mood induction in remitted and depressed patients with type 1 bipolar disorder,[84] although this study did not, include a healthy comparison group. Malhi et al[85] scanned patients with bipolar depression on an affect, generation task where they viewed captioned emotional pictures. In comparison with healthy controls, the bipolar depressed group showed enhanced subcortical activation in the amygdala, thalamus, and basal ganglia. A comparable finding was reported by Chen et al,[86] who used a facial expression task in two groups of bipolar patients with depression and mania. The bipolar depressed group displayed relative increases in subcortical limbic activity in response to happy faces. These findings of subcortical/limbic hyperreactivity are consistent with the findings discussed above in the remitted phase. Notably, this pattern of neural response may also be capable of distinguishing bipolar disorder from major depressive disorder. Lawrence et al[87] directly compared neural activity to emotional facial expressions in bipolar disorder and major depressive disorder. The bipolar group were stable outpatients who had subclinical depressive symptoms. This study found increases in amygdala and subcortical limbic activity predominantly to mild happy, but also to fearful, facial expressions. Thus, the imaging studies in bipolar depression to date indicate a pattern of decreased prefrontal activity during cognitive challenge paradigms, coupled with a relative hyperactivity of subcortical limbic structures. There is clearly a need for further studies comparing neural activity across illness states in bipolar disorder, and contrasting these effects against major depressive disorder. In addition, there are few neuroimaging studies in unmedicated patients, and studies may benefit from using longitudinal designs in addition to the more standard parallel-groups designs.

Relevance for treatment

Cognitive effects of bipolar medications

Studies examining cognitive function and neural systems in bipolar disorder are typically confounded by medication status. It is common for patients in research studies to be maintained on mood-stabilizing medications, and many studies also include subgroups of patients receiving neuroleptics, antidepressants and sedatives. These medications may act directly to influence cognitive function in either a beneficial or detrimental manner. A number of studies have investigated the effects of lithium medication on cognition, (reviewed in refs 88, 89). These studies have employed a variety of designs, cither comparing bipolar patients on and off lithium medication,[90] comparing lithium-treated euthymic patients against, controls,[91] or studying the effects of lithium versus placebo in healthy volunteers.[92-94] These studies have shown reliable effects on psychomotor speed, consistent, with frequent complaints of mental slowing from patients. There is also some evidence for impaired learning and memory function, but higher-level executive function and attention appear to be spared, and there is no evidence for cumulative effects of long-term treatment.[88] A number of the neuropsychological studies in euthymic bipolar patients have also performed post-hoc analyses to examine potential confounding effects of lithium treatment[19-95] and have generally found patients receiving lithium to perform similarly to those not receiving lithium. There is less evidence for cognition-enhancing or-impairing effects of other mood stabilizers. Two studies have reported that the use of antipsychotic medications was associated with deficits in executive function[9,95]-; an effect that remained present after controlling for levels of psychosis, and applied equally to atypical and conventional antipsychotics.[9] It is generally thought that selective serotonin reuptake inhibitor (SSRI) medication does not induce significant cognitive impairment,[96] but benzodiazepines and anticholinergic drugs may have some detrimental effects, mainly on psychomotor speed and memory rather than higher-level executive function.[97,98] It is also difficult to assess the cumulative impact, of polypharmacy on cognitive function.

Predictors of treatment response

Recent, research has begun to use neurocognitive testing and functional imaging to investigate markers associated with treatment response. In major depressive disorder, metabolism in the medial prefrontal cortex prior to initiating treatment has been reported to predict the response to antidepressant medication, although the direction of effect, has been somewhat, inconsistent: several studies have associated a positive response with increased metabolism,[99,100] whereas a further study associated a positive response with decreased metabolism in the same region.[101] Recent research has begun to examine effects associated with treatment response in bipolar disorder. One study reported decreases in subcortical limbic activity (ventral striatum and amygdala) whilst, at rest, following a positive response to levothyroxine in bipolar depression.[102] A recent study also indicated a reduction in dorsolateral prefrontal activity during processing of emotional stimuli, in bipolar depressed patients who responded to sleep deprivation and light, therapy.[103] Future work may also fruitfully examine treatment response in relation to neurocognitive variables, as these are considerably more amenable for use in clinical settings compared with fMRI. In bipolar disorder, there is clear evidence that neurocognitive abnormalities adversely affect functional outcomes.[104,105] A recent study reported that two neurocognitive indices of executive control (Stroop score and verbal fluency) predicted the time to remission in first, episode bipolar disorder,[106] although this group included a mixture of patients in manic and depressed states. Further research is clearly required to examine neurocognitive and neuroimaging predictors of response to pharmacotherapy, and also to psychological treatments in bipolar disorder.

Conclusions

Evidence from neurocognitive testing indicates a complex array of neuropsychological impairments in patients with bipolar disorder. A surge of complimentary studies using functional brain imaging indicate that these deficits may be associated with pathophysiology in a neural system comprising the prefrontal and anterior cingulate cortex, as well as subcortical limbic regions including the amygdala and ventral striatum. A detailed description of this cognitive and neurobiological profile has been elusive, due to a combination of both state-and trait-related changes in bipolar disorder. In principle, three distinct profiles may exist. An abnormality may be a state-related deficit that recovers fully during periods of remission, but is similarly affected by both manic and depressive episodes. We have presented evidence that executive dysfunction may adhere to this profile, associated with reduced neural activation in the dorsal and lateral aspects of the prefrontal cortex. However, it should be noted that executive dysfunction in bipolar disorder is heterogeneous, and this deficit, can persist in some patients, probably as a function of clinical features such as illness severity and possibly medication status. The second profile of deficit, is the trait marker: an impairment that is present during acute episodes but, which also persists during periods of remission. There is reasonable evidence that deficits in target detection on sustained attention (CPT) tasks adhere to a trait profile. Trait deficits may occur as a consequence of repeated illness episodes (as may be the case for executive dysfunction), or may predate the onset, of the illness and be associated with genetic liability to bipolar disorder. Ongoing research in high-risk populations, such as the unaffected first-degree relatives of bipolar probands, may identify neurocognitive markers associated with bipolar vulnerability, but studies so far have been inconclusive and limited by small sample sizes.[107-109] The third profile is of a state-related marker that is restricted to either the manic or the depressive episodes. We have presented some evidence that deficits in risk assessment, emotional decision-making, and impulsive responding are pronounced during the manic episodes, and these may represent objective, quantifiable indicators of the classic manic symptoms of disinhibition and behavior with harmful consequences (eg, spending sprees and sexual indiscretions). It is likely that, these deficits are linked to dysregulation of the orbitofrontal cortex. The degree to which these changes are restricted to mania is equivocal currently, given the lack of data in bipolar depression. Functional imaging studies in bipolar depression have indicated a hyperreactivity of subcortical limbic systems, such that emotionally neutral material may be processed in an emotional manner. Whilst, it is promising that this phenomenon may show specificity to bipolar disorder compared with major depressive disorder,[87] it is not, yet fully clear whether this effect, is restricted to bipolar depression or could represent, a trait marker. The clinical implications of this program of research are substantial. By identifying illness markers that, are selectively associated with bipolar disorder, we may be able to diagnose patients earlier in the course of the illness, and at an earlier stage during illness episodes, with considerable benefits to long-term functional outcome and quality of life. Cognitive and imaging variables have the potential to predict, treatment response in symptomatic patients, and possibly to predict which course of treatment (eg, pharmacotherapy versus psychotherapy) may be best, suited to individual patients. This raises the possibility that these instruments should be incorporated into routine clinical management. The findings discussed in this review illustrate one of the current aims for the development of the DSM-V (to be released in 2011), which is the need to translate research findings from basic and clinical neuroscience into a system of psychiatric classification based on pathophysiological and etiological processes.[110,111]
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1.  Reduced neuronal size and glial cell density in area 9 of the dorsolateral prefrontal cortex in subjects with major depressive disorder.

Authors:  David Cotter; Daniel Mackay; Gursh Chana; Clare Beasley; Sabine Landau; Ian P Everall
Journal:  Cereb Cortex       Date:  2002-04       Impact factor: 5.357

2.  Impaired recognition of facial emotion in mania.

Authors:  Anna Lembke; Terence A Ketter
Journal:  Am J Psychiatry       Date:  2002-02       Impact factor: 18.112

3.  Limbic hyperreactivity in bipolar II disorder.

Authors:  Gregory S Berns; Megan Martin; Shawnette M Proper
Journal:  Am J Psychiatry       Date:  2002-02       Impact factor: 18.112

4.  Rostral and orbital prefrontal cortex dysfunction in the manic state of bipolar disorder.

Authors:  H P Blumberg; E Stern; S Ricketts; D Martinez; J de Asis; T White; J Epstein; N Isenberg; P A McBride; I Kemperman; S Emmerich; V Dhawan; D Eidelberg; J H Kocsis; D A Silbersweig
Journal:  Am J Psychiatry       Date:  1999-12       Impact factor: 18.112

Review 5.  "Cade's disease" and beyond: misdiagnosis, antidepressant use, and a proposed definition for bipolar spectrum disorder.

Authors:  S Nassir Ghaemi; James Y Ko; Frederick K Goodwin
Journal:  Can J Psychiatry       Date:  2002-03       Impact factor: 4.356

6.  Sustained attention deficit in bipolar disorder.

Authors:  Luke Clark; Susan D Iversen; Guy M Goodwin
Journal:  Br J Psychiatry       Date:  2002-04       Impact factor: 9.319

7.  Neuropsychological impairment among manic, depressed, and mixed-episode inpatients with bipolar disorder.

Authors:  Michael R Basso; Natasha Lowery; Jackie Neel; Rod Purdie; Robert A Bornstein
Journal:  Neuropsychology       Date:  2002-01       Impact factor: 3.295

8.  A preliminary FMRI study of sustained attention in euthymic, unmedicated bipolar disorder.

Authors:  Stephen M Strakowski; Caleb M Adler; Scott K Holland; Neil Mills; Melissa P DelBello
Journal:  Neuropsychopharmacology       Date:  2004-09       Impact factor: 7.853

9.  Perception of facial expressions of emotion in bipolar disorder.

Authors:  Helen R Venn; John M Gray; Barbara Montagne; Lindsey K Murray; D Michael Burt; Elisa Frigerio; David I Perrett; Allan H Young
Journal:  Bipolar Disord       Date:  2004-08       Impact factor: 6.744

10.  Abnormal ventral frontal response during performance of an affective go/no go task in patients with mania.

Authors:  Rebecca Elliott; Alan Ogilvie; Judy S Rubinsztein; Gloria Calderon; Raymond J Dolan; Barbara J Sahakian
Journal:  Biol Psychiatry       Date:  2004-06-15       Impact factor: 13.382

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1.  Impaired sustained attention and executive dysfunction: bipolar disorder versus depression-specific markers of affective disorders.

Authors:  Fadi T Maalouf; Crystal Klein; Luke Clark; Barbara J Sahakian; Edmund J Labarbara; Amelia Versace; Stefanie Hassel; Jorge R C Almeida; Mary L Phillips
Journal:  Neuropsychologia       Date:  2010-02-20       Impact factor: 3.139

2.  Neuropsychological function before and after subcallosal cingulate deep brain stimulation in patients with treatment-resistant depression.

Authors:  Jared L Moreines; Shawn M McClintock; Mary E Kelley; Paul E Holtzheimer; Helen S Mayberg
Journal:  Depress Anxiety       Date:  2014-04-17       Impact factor: 6.505

3.  Mapping mania symptoms based on focal brain damage.

Authors:  Gonçalo Cotovio; Daniel Talmasov; J Bernardo Barahona-Corrêa; Joey Hsu; Suhan Senova; Ricardo Ribeiro; Louis Soussand; Ana Velosa; Vera Cruz E Silva; Natalia Rost; Ona Wu; Alexander L Cohen; Albino J Oliveira-Maia; Michael D Fox
Journal:  J Clin Invest       Date:  2020-10-01       Impact factor: 14.808

4.  Colour discrimination thresholds in type 1 Bipolar Disorder: a pilot study.

Authors:  Thiago Monteiro Paiva Fernandes; Suellen Marinho Andrade; Michael Jackson Oliveira de Andrade; Renata Maria Toscano Barreto Lyra Nogueira; Natanael Antonio Santos
Journal:  Sci Rep       Date:  2017-11-27       Impact factor: 4.379

5.  Identification of the Molecular Events Involved in the Development of Prefrontal Cortex Through the Analysis of RNA-Seq Data From BrainSpan.

Authors:  Hadi Najafi; Mohadeseh Naseri; Javad Zahiri; Mehdi Totonchi; Majid Sadeghizadeh
Journal:  ASN Neuro       Date:  2019 Jan-Dec       Impact factor: 4.146

6.  Genome-wide DNA methylomic differences between dorsolateral prefrontal and temporal pole cortices of bipolar disorder.

Authors:  Ada M-C Ho; Stacey J Winham; Sebastian M Armasu; Caren J Blacker; Vincent Millischer; Catharina Lavebratt; James C Overholser; George J Jurjus; Lesa Dieter; Gouri Mahajan; Grazyna Rajkowska; Eric J Vallender; Craig A Stockmeier; Keith D Robertson; Mark A Frye; Doo-Sup Choi; Marin Veldic
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Review 7.  Functional neuroanatomy of mania.

Authors:  Gonçalo Cotovio; Albino J Oliveira-Maia
Journal:  Transl Psychiatry       Date:  2022-01-24       Impact factor: 6.222

8.  Modeling complex genetic and environmental influences on comorbid bipolar disorder with tobacco use disorder.

Authors:  Richard C McEachin; Nancy L Saccone; Scott F Saccone; Yelena D Kleyman-Smith; Tiara Kar; Rajesh K Kare; Alex S Ade; Maureen A Sartor; James D Cavalcoli; Melvin G McInnis
Journal:  BMC Med Genet       Date:  2010-01-26       Impact factor: 2.103

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Journal:  Chin Med       Date:  2009-01-30       Impact factor: 5.455

10.  Label-free proteomics differences in the dorsolateral prefrontal cortex between bipolar disorder patients with and without psychosis.

Authors:  Ada M-C Ho; Alejandra Cabello-Arreola; Matej Markota; Carrie J Heppelmann; M Cristine Charlesworth; Aysegul Ozerdem; Gouri Mahajan; Grazyna Rajkowska; Craig A Stockmeier; Mark A Frye; Doo-Sup Choi; Marin Veldic
Journal:  J Affect Disord       Date:  2020-04-08       Impact factor: 4.839

  10 in total

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