PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Study finds difference in way bipolar disorder affects brains of children versus adults

Meta-analysis suggests children may benefit from targeted treatments specific to pediatric brain activity

2014-06-18
(Press-News.org) PROVIDENCE, R.I. – A new study from Bradley Hospital has found that bipolar children have greater activation in the right amygdala – a brain region very important for emotional reaction – than bipolar adults when viewing emotional faces. The study, now published online in JAMA Psychiatry, suggests that bipolar children might benefit from treatments that target emotional face identification, such as computer based "brain games" or group and individual therapy.

This study is the first ever meta-analysis to directly compare brain changes in bipolar children to bipolar adults, using data from 100 functional MRI (fMRI) brain imaging studies with a pool of thousands of participants. Ezra Wegbreit, Ph.D., a postdoctoral research fellow at Bradley Hospital, led the study along with senior author Daniel Dickstein, M.D., director of the PediMIND Program at Bradley Hospital.

"Bipolar disorder is among the most debilitating psychiatric illnesses affecting adults worldwide, with an estimated prevalence of one to four percent of the adult population, but more than 40 percent of adults report their bipolar disorder started in childhood rather than adulthood," said Wegbreit. "Despite this, very few studies have examined whether brain or behavioral changes exist that are specific to children with bipolar disorder versus adults with bipolar disorder."

While fMRI studies have begun to investigate the neural mechanisms underlying bipolar disorder, few have directly compared differences in youths with bipolar disorder and bipolar adults. To address this gap, the research team conducted the large scale meta-analyses, directly comparing fMRI findings in bipolar youths versus bipolar adults, both relative to non-bipolar participants.

Analysis of emotional face recognition fMRI studies showed significantly greater amygdala activity among bipolar youths than bipolar adults. The team also analyzed studies using emotional stimuli, which again showed significantly greater levels of brain activation in bipolar children, this time in the inferior frontal gyrus and precuneus areas of the brain. In contrast, analyses of fMRI studies using non-emotional cognitive tasks showed a significant lack of brain activation in the anterior cingulate cortex of bipolar children. "Our meta-analysis has located different regions of the brain that are either hyper active or under active in children with bipolar disorder," said Wegbreit. "These point us to the targeted areas of the brain that relate to emotional dysfunction and cognitive deficits for children with bipolar disorder."

"Despite our best current treatments, bipolar disorder exacts a considerable toll on youths, including problems with friends, parents and at school, and high rates of psychiatric hospitalization and suicide attempts," said Dickstein. "More research into targeted treatments is needed now that we know children's brains are impacted in specific, identifiable ways by bipolar disorder."

Dickstein added that Bradley Hospital's PediMIND Program is currently conducting several research projects on pediatric bipolar disorder, including potential brain-based treatment. "Understanding more about the brains of children and adults with mental illness is very important because, ultimately, all mental illnesses are reflected in changes in brain activity," said Dickstein. "Locating the underlying brain change in bipolar youths could lead us to new, brain-based ways to improve how we diagnose and treat this disorder."

Ongoing studies by the PediMIND Program and other research groups are working to determine if computer-based "brain games" or group or individual therapy might improve these brain changes in a more targeted way, and improve the lives of children and adults with bipolar disorder.

INFORMATION: This study was supported by the National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH) under grant number T32MH019927.

Wegbreit and Dickstein's principal affiliation is Bradley Hospital, a division of the Lifespan health system in Rhode Island. Dickstein is also director of the PediMIND program and associate director of research at Bradley Hospital. Wegbreit is an NIMH T32 Postdoctoral Research Fellow in Child Mental Health at Bradley Hospital and the Warren Alpert Medical School of Brown University, Department of Psychiatry and Human Behavior.

About Bradley Hospital Founded in 1931, Bradley Hospital, located in East Providence, R.I., was the nation's first psychiatric hospital devoted exclusively for children and adolescents. It remains a nationally recognized center for children's mental health care, training and research. Bradley Hospital was awarded the distinction of 'Top Performer on Key Quality Measures' for both 2011 and 2012 by The Joint Commission, the leading accreditor of health organizations in the U.S. Bradley Hospital is the only hospital in Rhode Island and the only psychiatric hospital in New England to receive this designation. Bradley Hospital is a member of the Lifespan health system and is a teaching hospital for The Warren Alpert Medical School of Brown University. Follow us on Facebook and on Twitter (@BradleyHospital). END


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Making smartphones smarter with see-through sensors

Making smartphones smarter with see-through sensors
2014-06-18
WASHINGTON, June 18, 2014—Your smartphone's display glass could soon be more than just a pretty face, thanks to new technology developed by researchers from Montreal and the New York-based company Corning Incorporated. The team has created the first laser-written light-guiding systems that are efficient enough to be developed for commercial use. They describe their work in a paper published today in The Optical Society's (OSA) open-access journal, Optics Express. This revolutionary work could open up new real estate in the phone by embedding the glass with layer upon ...

Combatting cuckoos

2014-06-18
How do animals use their distinctive patterning to recognize each other? For some birds, recognizing one's own eggs can be a matter of life or death. In a new study, researchers from Harvard University and the University of Cambridge show that many birds parasitized by the Common Cuckoo have evolved distinctive pattern signatures on their eggs in order to distinguish them from those laid by a cuckoo cheat. The study reveals that these signatures provide a powerful defense against cuckoo trickery, helping host birds to reject cuckoo eggs before they hatch and destroy the ...

Columbia Engineering team finds thousands of secret keys in Android apps

Columbia Engineering team finds thousands of secret keys in Android apps
2014-06-18
New York, NY—June 18, 2014—In a paper presented—and awarded the prestigious Ken Sevcik Outstanding Student Paper Award—at the ACM SIGMETRICS conference on June 18, Jason Nieh, professor of computer science at Columbia Engineering, and PhD candidate Nicolas Viennot reported that they have discovered a crucial security problem in Google Play, the official Android app store where millions of users of Android, the most popular mobile platform, get their apps. "Google Play has more than one million apps and over 50 billion app downloads, but no one reviews what gets put into ...

New manufacturing methods needed for 'soft' machines, robots

New manufacturing methods needed for soft machines, robots
2014-06-18
WEST LAFAYETTE, Ind. — Researchers have developed a technique that might be used to produce "soft machines" made of elastic materials and liquid metals for potential applications in robotics, medical devices and consumer electronics. Such an elastic technology could make possible robots that have sensory skin and stretchable garments that people might wear to interact with computers or for therapeutic purposes. However, new manufacturing techniques must be developed before soft machines become commercially practical, said Rebecca Kramer, an assistant professor of mechanical ...

Quest for education creating graying ghost towns at top of the world

Quest for education creating graying ghost towns at top of the world
2014-06-18
Ethnic Tibetan communities in Nepal's highlands are rapidly shrinking as more parents send their children away for a better education and modern careers, a trend that threatens to create a region of graying ghost towns at the top of the world, according to a study that includes Dartmouth College. The findings, which have major social and demographic implications for the Himalayan region, appear in the journal Mountain Research and Development. A PDF of the study is available on request. Taken together, the outmigration of young people, a low birth rate and population ...

Counterterrorism, ethics, and global health

2014-06-18
The surge in murders of polio vaccination workers in Pakistan has made headlines this year, but little attention has been devoted to the ethical issues surrounding the global health impact of current counterterrorism policy and practice. An essay in the Hastings Center Report reviews the range of harms to population health traceable to counterterrorism operations. It also identifies concerns involving moral agency and responsibility – specifically of humanitarian health workers, military medical personnel, and national security officials and operatives – and it highlights ...

Proposed children's study needs refinement, report finds

2014-06-18
PRINCETON, N.J.—A study that would track the health of 100,000 babies to age 21 has been put on hold following the release of an assessment report issued June 16 by the National Research Council and Institute of Medicine (IOM). While the congressionally mandated report endorses several aspects of the proposed study design of the National Children's Study (NCS), the authors – including Sara McLanahan, the William S. Tod Professor of Sociology and Public Affairs at Princeton University's Woodrow Wilson School of International and Public Affairs – are critical of the sampling ...

False negative results found in prognostic testing for breast cancer

2014-06-18
A recent study evaluating HER2 testing in a large cohort of women with breast cancer found important limitations in the conventional way HER2 testing is performed in the US and internationally. Dartmouth-Hitchcock Norris Cotton Cancer Center physicians and researchers retested tumor samples from a large group of women and found that 22 out of 530 women had their tumor type incorrectly classified. They reported their findings in a publication titled "Assessing the Discordance Rate between Local and Central HER2 Testing in Women with Locally Determined HER2-Negative Breast ...

New Stanford blood test identifies heart-transplant rejection earlier than biopsy can

2014-06-18
Stanford University researchers have devised a noninvasive way to detect heart-transplant rejection weeks or months earlier than previously possible. The test, which relies on the detection of increasing amounts of the donor's DNA in the blood of the recipient, does not require the removal of any heart tissue. "This test appears to be safer, cheaper and more accurate than a heart biopsy, which is the current gold standard to detect and monitor heart-transplant rejection," said Stephen Quake, PhD, professor of bioengineering and of applied physics. "We believe it's likely ...

How a new approach to funding Alzheimer's research could pay off

2014-06-18
More than 5 million Americans suffer from Alzheimer's disease, the affliction that erodes memory and other mental capacities, but no drugs targeting the disease have been approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration since 2003. Now a paper by an MIT professor suggests that a revamped way of financing Alzheimer's research could spur the development of useful new drugs for the illness. "We are spending tremendous amounts of resources dealing with this disease, but we don't have any effective therapies for it," says Andrew Lo, the Charles E. and Susan T. Harris Professor ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

How we classify flood risk may give developers, home buyers a false sense of security

GLP-1 drugs may reduce surgery complications in patients with diabetes

Physicists explain a stellar stream’s distinctive features

GLP-1 RA medications safe and very effective for treating obesity in adults without diabetes

Efforts to reduce kids' screen time weakened by unequal access to green space

Study reveals rising interest in permanent contraception after Roe v. Wade was overturned

U of M Medical School study finds point-of-care ultrasound enhances early pregnancy care, cuts emergency visits by 81%

Ice patches on Beartooth Plateau reveal how ancient landscape differed from today’s

MMRI scientist publishes breakthrough study detailing how ketones improves blood flow to the heart

2025 Seismological Society of America Annual Meeting

New AI tool uses routine blood tests to predict immunotherapy response for many cancers

1 in 4 U.S. veterans aged 60+ report having being diagnosed with cardiovascular disease at some point, with potential implications for their physical and mental health

These 11 genes may help us better understand forever chemicals’ effects on the brain

Microplastics widespread in seafood people eat

Lead pollution likely caused widespread IQ declines in ancient Rome, new study finds

Researchers reveal ancient dietary habits and early human use of plant foods

NRG Oncology adds new theranostics subcommittee to organization, new leadership members for CCDR and early phase trial oversight committees

New NEJM Perspective article highlights urgent need for widespread adoption of Fracture Liaison Services (FLS) to combat rising burden of osteoporosis-related fractures

Hornwort genomes provide clues on how plants conquered the land

New mechanism discovered that triggers immune response in cells with damaged DNA

Model proposed for treating loneliness in borderline personality disorder

Marco Demaria named editor-in-chief of Aging (Aging-US)

A healthy diet is key to a healthy gut microbiome

New study links millions of diabetes and heart disease cases globally to sugary drinks

Fluoride exposure and children’s IQ scores

Trends in treatment need and receipt for substance use disorders in the US

Gender-affirming medications rarely prescribed to US adolescents

Burden of infections in early life and risk of infections and systemic antibiotics use in childhood

New study shows plummeting STIs with doxyPEP use

Newly discovered 'kiss and capture' mechanism explains the formation of Pluto and its largest moon

[Press-News.org] Study finds difference in way bipolar disorder affects brains of children versus adults
Meta-analysis suggests children may benefit from targeted treatments specific to pediatric brain activity