TY - JOUR
PY - 2016//
TI - Biological hypotheses and biomarkers of bipolar disorder
JO - Psychiatry and the Clinical Neurosciences
A1 - Sigitova, Ekaterina
A1 - Fišar, Zdeněk
A1 - Hroudová, Jana
A1 - Cikánková, Tereza
A1 - Raboch, Jiri
SP - 77
EP - 103
VL - 71
IS - 2
N2 - The most common mood disorders are major depressive disorders and bipolar disorders. The pathophysiology of bipolar disorder is complex, multifactorial, and not fully understood. Creation of new hypotheses in the field gives impetus for studies and searching new biomarkers of the bipolar disorder. Conversely, new biomarkers facilitate not only diagnosis of a disorder and monitoring of biological effects of treatment, but also formulation of new hypotheses of the causes and pathophysiology of the bipolar disorder. Bipolar disorder is characterized by multiple associations between disturbed brain development, neuroplasticity, and chronobiology, caused by genetic and environmental factors, and defects in apoptotic, immune-inflammatory, neurotransmitter, neurotrophin, and calcium signaling pathways, oxidative and nitrosative stress, cellular bioenergetics, and membrane or vesicular transport. Current biological hypotheses of bipolar disorder are summarized, including related pathophysiological processes and key biomarkers, which have been associated with changes in genetics, systems of neurotransmitter and neurotrophic factors, neuroinflammation, autoimmunity, cytokines, stress axis activity, chronobiology, oxidative stress, and mitochondrial dysfunctions. Therapeutic hypotheses and mechanisms of the switch between depressive and manic state are discussed.
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Language: en
LA - en SN - 1323-1316 UR - http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/pcn.12476 ID - ref1 ER -