Mitochondrial respiratory capacity in patients with acute episodes of bipolar disorder compared with clinical remission
A. Giménez-Palomo, M. Guitart-Mampel, A. Meseguer, M. Valentí, L. Bracco, H. Andreu, E. Vieta, G. Garrabou, I. Pacchiarotti

TL;DR
This study found that mitochondrial respiratory capacity in bipolar disorder patients increases after clinical remission compared to during acute mood episodes.
Contribution
The study is the first to longitudinally compare mitochondrial respiration in bipolar disorder patients during acute episodes and remission.
Findings
Maximal oxygen consumption capacity (ETC) significantly increased in clinical remission compared to acute episodes.
Bipolar depression patients showed lower ETC rates than those with manic episodes during acute phases.
Mitochondrial respiration differences were observed between healthy controls and bipolar patients during acute episodes.
Abstract
Bipolar disorder (BD) is a chronic and recurrent disease characterized by acute mood episodes alternated with periods of euthymia. The available literature postulates that a biphasic dysregulation of mitochondrial bioenergetics might be observed in BD. We aimed to explore differences in in vivo mitochondrial respiration (1) intra-individually: longitudinally within patients during an acute mood episode of BD and after clinical remission, and (2) inter-individually: between patients with BD on depressive or manic episodes and healthy controls (HC). Patients admitted to our acute psychiatric ward with a manic episode or bipolar depression were recruited. Different mitochondrial oxygen consumption rates (OCRs) were assessed during the acute episode (T0) and after clinical remission (T1) in one million of peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC): Routine, Leak, ETC and Rox. They were…
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Taxonomy
TopicsBipolar Disorder and Treatment
