Faulty Body Clock May Make Kids Bipolar
Main Category: BipolarAlso Included In: Pediatrics / Children's Health; Genetics
Article Date: 12 Nov 2009 - 3:00 PDT
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Malfunctioning circadian clock genes may be responsible for bipolar disorder in children. Researchers writing in the open access journal BMC Psychiatry found four versions of the regulatory gene RORB that were associated with pediatric bipolar disorder.
Alexander Niculescu from Indiana University School of Medicine, Indianapolis, US, worked with a team of researchers at Harvard, UC San Diego, Massachusetts General Hospital and SUNY Upstate Medical University to study the RORA and RORB genes of 152 children with the condition and 140 control children. They found four alterations to the RORB gene that were positively associated with being bipolar. Niculescu said, "Our findings suggest that clock genes in general and RORB in particular may be important candidates for further investigation in the search for the molecular basis of bipolar disorder".
RORB is mainly expressed in the eye, pineal gland and brain. Its expression is known to change as a function of circadian rhythm in some tissues, and mice without the gene exhibit circadian rhythm abnormalities. According to Niculescu, "Bipolar disorder is often characterized by circadian rhythm abnormalities, and this is particularly true among pediatric bipolar patients. Decreased sleep has even been noted as one of the earliest symptoms discriminating children with bipolar disorder from those with attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD). It will be necessary to verify our association results in other independent samples, and to continue to study the relationship between RORB, other clock genes, and bipolar disorder".
Pediatric bipolar disorder is a controversial diagnosis characterized by alternating bouts of depression and mania in children, although it does not affect all young people in the same way and the duration and severity of the disorder can vary enormously.
Notes:
Evidence for Genetic Association of RORB with Bipolar Disorder
Casey L McGrath, Stephen J Glatt, Pamela Sklar, Helen Le-Niculescu, Ronald Kuczenski, Alysa E Doyle, Joseph Biederman, Eric Mick, Stephen V Faraone, Alexander B Niculescu and Ming T Tsuang
BMC Psychiatry (in press)
http://www.biomedcentral.com/bmcpsychiatry/
Source: Graeme Baldwin
BioMed Central
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MLA
13 Feb. 2012. <http://www.medicalnewstoday.com/releases/170732.php>
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http://www.medicalnewstoday.com/releases/170732.php.
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Visitor Opinions In Chronological Order (1)
Sodium Links Bipolar Disorder To Circadian Rhythm
posted by Greg on 7 Dec 2009 at 4:55 amI had bipolar disorder several years ago and I cured it with light therapy and a high salt diet (isotonic). The light therapy has an obvious connection to the circadian clock – it lengthens daylight. But it took me a while to find how salt was connected. I discovered that in the evening my urine sodium level rose dramatically. This implies that my sodium blood level falls at this time, probably in preparation for sleep. When my sodium level goes below a certain level it causes a condition called hyponatremia which includes mental symptoms. The high salt diet prevents me from going below that critical level and the extra evening light therapy slows down the loss of sodium during the evening hours. Incidentally, this is also a better explanation than polydipsia for the high frequency (10x) of hyponatremia among psychiatric hospital admissions when compared to all other admissions. From my experience, I believe that if sodium levels could be tested in a 24 hour period prior to admission, the frequency would be even higher.
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