| Literature DB >> 28008318 |
Dominique Endres1, Rick Dersch2, Tilman Hottenrott2, Evgeniy Perlov1, Simon Maier1, Dietrich van Calker3, Benedikt Hochstuhl1, Nils Venhoff4, Oliver Stich2, Ludger Tebartz van Elst1.
Abstract
Bipolar disorder (BD) is a severe and lifelong condition. Primary endogenic polygenetic forms are common. Secondary organic forms have received increasing interest recently due to the detection of immunological encephalopathies that mimic various psychiatric syndromes, including BD. However, only limited data about routine findings of cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) analyses in BD are available. Therefore, we investigated the frequency of alterations in the CSF in patients with BD and the association with autoantibodies, cerebral magnetic resonance imaging, and electroencephalography findings. CSF samples of patients with BD collected from January 1998 until December 2015 were analyzed retrospectively. Patients with preexisting causes for alterations in the CSF (e.g., patients with obvious past or current neurological disorders) were excluded. In total, 63 patients with BD fulfilled the inclusion criteria for the study. In 1.6% of the patients with BD, an increased white blood cell count was found in the CSF. Increased albumin quotients were found in 12.9% of the patients, oligoclonal bands (OCBs) in 1.6%, and increased immunoglobulin (Ig) G indices in 3.2% (OCBs were not measured in case of increased IgG indices). No significant differences in CSF findings were found between patients with manic and depressive episodes. The main findings of this open uncontrolled study are that alterations in the CSF may be found in a small, but potentially relevant, subgroup of patients with BD. These findings are discussed in light of the new concepts of mild encephalitis and immunological encephalopathy. The detection of patients with possibly secondary organic bipolar syndromes could open up new causal treatment options with immunomodulatory medication.Entities:
Keywords: bipolar disorder; blood–brain-barrier dysfunction; cerebrospinal fluid; immunological encephalopathy; mild encephalitis
Year: 2016 PMID: 28008318 PMCID: PMC5144108 DOI: 10.3389/fpsyt.2016.00194
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Psychiatry ISSN: 1664-0640 Impact factor: 4.157
The bipolar disorder patient cohort.
| Available bipolar disorder CSF cohort from 1998 until 2015 | 75 |
|---|---|
| Reasons for exclusion | |
| Infectious encephalitis | 2 (1× viral encephalitis, 1× tick-borne encephalitis) |
| Demyelinating diseases | 2 (2× multiple sclerosis) |
| Delirium | 1 (most likely medication-induced) |
| Dementia | 2 (1× Alzheimer’s disease, 1× multifactorial dementia) |
| Brain tumor/brain surgery | 1 (medulloblastoma) |
| Movement disorders | 2 (1× Parkinson’s disease, 1× unclear spastic tetraparesis) |
| Traumatic brain injury | 1 (severe cerebral contusion) |
| Previous stroke | 1 (repeated ischemic stroke) |
| 63 | |
Available datasets.
| Diagnostic measurements | Number of samples |
|---|---|
| CSF basic diagnostics (WBC count, protein concentration, albumin quotient, and intrathecal immunoglobulin synthesis) | 63 |
| Intracellular synaptic and onconeural antigens (GAD, amphiphysin, Yo, Hu, Ri, Cv2/CRMP5, Ma1, Ma2, and SOX1) | 29 |
| Antibodies against neuronal cell surface antigens (NMDAR, AMPA-1/2-R, GABA-B-R, and VGKC-complex: LGI1 and CASPR2) | 23 |
| Electroencephalography data sets | 61 |
| Magnetic resonance imaging data sets | 50 |
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WBC, white blood cell; GAD, glutamic acid decarboxylase; Yo/Hu/Ri, abbreviations of first patients’ name; Cv2/CRMP5, anti-collapsin response-mediator protein; Ma1/Ma2, 37, and 40 kDa neuronal proteins; SOX1, sry-like high-mobility group box 1; NMDAR, N-methyl-.
CSF basic diagnostics in bipolar patients.
| CSF measurement | Mean ± SD | Number of cases | Frequency of alterations | Threshold |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| White blood cell count ( | 1.35 ± 0.87 | ↔: 61; ↑: 1 (cell count: 6/μl) | 1.6% | <5/μl |
| Total protein concentration ( | 436.40 ± 218.93 | ↔: 36; ↑: 24 | 40% | <450 mg/l |
| Albumin quotient ( | 5.97 ± 3.00 | ↔: 54; ↑: 8 | 12.9% | <40 years: 6.5 × 10−3; 40–60 years: 8.0 × 10−3; >60 years: 9.3 × 10−3 ( |
| Immunoglobulin-G-index ( | 0.50 ± 0.13 | ↔: 61; ↑: 2 | 3.2% | Immunoglobulin-G-index ≤0.7 mg/l ( |
| Oligoclonal bands ( | – | No: 58; Yes: 3 OCB restricted to CSF: 1 OCB mirror pattern: 2 | 4.9%; OCB restricted to CSF: 1.6%; OCB mirror pattern: 3.3% | No oligoclonal bands |
CSF, cerebrospinal fluid; OCBs, oligoclonal bands; ↔, value within normal range; ↑, value above normal upper limit of normal.
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Patients with increased WBC count, CSF-specific OCBs, or elevated IgG index.
| Nr. | Patient | CSF | cMRI | EEG | Neuropsych. | Other findings | Comment |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1. | 56 y, female, bipolar disorder, depressive episode | Increased WBC count (6 cells/μl), protein concentration slightly increased (510 mg/l) | Over years, unchanged left cerebellar cavernoma with associated developmental venous anomaly without hemorrhage; mild supratentorial atrophy and unspecific white matter lesions | Normal | Slight slowing in word fluency, retentiveness, and attention | No infectious causes (borreliosis, lues, etc.); autoantibody screening not performed | – |
| 2. | 21 y, female, bipolar disorder, depressive episode | CSF-specific oligoclonal bands | Alterations of the right lateral ventricle with mild gliosis and reduced white matter volume | Intermittent generalized slowing | Deficits in all domains of TAP | Increased thyreoglobulin antibodies; autoantibody screening negative (including rheumatological screening), the “MRZ” reaction was negative | No typical relapses suggestive for multiple sclerosis episodes were reported; the Swanton criteria for dissemination in time and space were not fulfilled |
| 3. | 61 y, female, bipolar disorder, depression | Increased IgG-index (1.3); IgG fraction in the Reibergram: ~50% | Mild increased CSF spaces, microangiopathic white matter lesions, the cMRI was affected by many artifacts | Normal | n.p. | Comorbid hypothyroidism (thyroid autoantibodies not measured) and psoriasis vulgaris, autoantibody screening not performed | No typical relapses suggestive for multiple sclerosis episodes were reported |
| 4. | 37 y, male, bipolar disorder, manic episode | Increased IgG-index (0.81); IgG fraction in the Reibergram: ~10% | Normal | Dysrhytmic EEG with β-overlap | n.p. | Earlier lues infection; autoantibody screening not performed | Elevated IgG index possibly due to clinically inapparent CNS infection after peripheral syphilis infection |
CSF, cerebrospinal fluid; cMRI, cerebral magnetic resonance imaging; EEG, electroencephalography; TAP, test for attentional performance; n.p., not performed; MRZ-reaction, polyspecific, intrathecal humoral immune response against measles, rubella, and varicella zoster virus; y, years; IgG, immunoglobulin G.
cMRI and EEG pathologies in patients with bipolar syndromes.
| Localization of cMRI alterations | Frequency absolute |
|---|---|
| White matter lesions/cerebral microangiopathy | 22/50 (44) |
| Cortical atrophy | 2/50 (4) |
| Postischemic changes | 1/50 (2) |
| Other alterations | 3/50 (6) |
| Cerebellar cavernoma | 1/50 (2) |
| Mild asymmetrical hippocampi | 1/50 (2) |
| Mild gliosis | 1/50 (2) |
| Anatomic variations | 2/50 (4) |
| Arteriovenous malformation | 1/50 (2) |
| Aplasia of the left transverse sinus | 1/50 (2) |
| Overall cMRI alterations | 30/50 (60) |
| Continuous generalized slow activity | 2/61 (3) |
| Continuous regional slow activity | 0/61 (0) |
| Intermittent generalized slow activity | 9/61 (15) |
| Intermittent regional slow activity | 3/61 (5) |
| Epileptic activity | 0/61 (0) |
| Overall EEG pathologies | 14/61 (23) |
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cMRI, cerebral magnetic resonance imaging; EEG, electroencephalography.