Investigating Epigenetic and Neuroimaging Profiles in Bipolar Disorder and Behavioral Variant Frontotemporal Dementia: An integrated epigenetic-neuroimaging approach
G. Delvecchio, M. Serpente, L. Di Consoli, E. Rotondo, V. Borraci, E. Scola, F. M. Triuzi, M. Castellani, A. Arighi, E. Scarpini, D. Galimberti, P. Brambilla

TL;DR
This study explores how epigenetic and brain imaging patterns can help distinguish between bipolar disorder and a type of dementia, improving diagnosis and treatment.
Contribution
The study introduces an integrated approach combining epigenetic and neuroimaging data to differentiate between BD and bvFTD.
Findings
Distinct structural and metabolic brain features were found in elderly BD and bvFTD patients.
Epigenetic patterns in plasma-derived vesicles may correlate with brain imaging markers in these disorders.
Findings could lead to better biological signatures for differential diagnosis and treatment strategies.
Abstract
Discriminating between bipolar disorder (BD) and behavioral variant Frontotemporal Dementia (bvFTD) is a clinical challenge as it is still based on clinical judgement, which often leads to misdiagnosis. This challenge is particularly pronounced in cases involving the C9orf72 hexanucleotide expansion, a genetic factor responsible for a substantial portion of familial FTD cases, as in these patients the development of late psychoses is particularly frequent. Moreover, individuals with C9orf72 bvFTD are also characterized by behavioral changes that resemble those seen in late-life BD, especially during the early stages of the disease. This raises questions about whether the clinical similarities between BD and bvFTD are rooted in specific alterations within the brain networks involved in cognitive processing or in selective genetic and epigenetic mutations. In light of this, our recently…
Genes, proteins, chemicals, diseases, species, mutations and cell lines named across the full text — each resolved to its canonical identifier and authoritative record.
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Taxonomy
TopicsBipolar Disorder and Treatment
