Bond D J, Silveira L E, MacMillan E L, Torres I J, Lang D J, Su W, Honer W G, Lam R W, Yatham L N
Mood Disorders Centre, Department of Psychiatry, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, BC, Canada.
Department of Psychiatry, University of Minnesota Medical School, Minneapolis, MN, USA.
Transl Psychiatry. 2017 Mar 28;7(3):e1071. doi: 10.1038/tp.2017.42.
We previously reported that higher body mass index (BMI) was associated with greater hippocampal glutamate+glutamine in people with bipolar disorder (BD), but not in non-BD healthy comparator subjects (HSs). In the current report, we extend these findings by examining the impact of BD diagnosis and BMI on hippocampal volumes and the concentrations of several additional neurochemicals in 57 early-stage BD patients and 31 HSs. Using 3-T magnetic resonance imaging and magnetic resonance spectroscopy, we measured bilateral hippocampal volumes and the hippocampal concentrations of four neurochemicals relevant to BD: N-acetylaspartate+N-acteylaspartylglutamate (tNAA), creatine+phosphocreatine (Cre), myoinositol (Ins) and glycerophosphocholine+phosphatidylcholine (Cho). We used multivariate factorial analysis of covariance to investigate the impact of diagnosis (patient vs HS) and BMI category (normal weight vs overweight/obese) on these variables. We found a main effect of diagnosis on hippocampal volumes, with patients having smaller hippocampi than HSs. There was no association between BMI and hippocampal volumes. We found diagnosis and BMI effects on hippocampal neurochemistry, with patients having lower Cre, Ins and Cho, and overweight/obese subjects having higher levels of these chemicals. In patient-only models that controlled for clinical and treatment variables, we detected an additional association between higher BMI and lower tNAA that was absent in HSs. To our knowledge, this was the first study to investigate the relative contributions of BD diagnosis and BMI to hippocampal volumes, and only the second to investigate their contributions to hippocampal chemistry. It provides further evidence that diagnosis and elevated BMI both impact limbic brain areas relevant to BD.
我们之前报道过,在双相情感障碍(BD)患者中,较高的体重指数(BMI)与海马体中谷氨酸+谷氨酰胺水平升高有关,但在非BD健康对照受试者(HSs)中并非如此。在本报告中,我们通过研究BD诊断和BMI对57例早期BD患者和31例HSs海马体体积以及其他几种神经化学物质浓度的影响,扩展了这些发现。使用3-T磁共振成像和磁共振波谱,我们测量了双侧海马体体积以及与BD相关的四种神经化学物质在海马体中的浓度:N-乙酰天门冬氨酸+N-乙酰天门冬氨酰谷氨酸(tNAA)、肌酸+磷酸肌酸(Cre)、肌醇(Ins)和甘油磷酸胆碱+磷脂酰胆碱(Cho)。我们使用多因素协方差分析来研究诊断(患者与HSs)和BMI类别(正常体重与超重/肥胖)对这些变量的影响。我们发现诊断对海马体体积有主要影响,患者的海马体比HSs小。BMI与海马体体积之间没有关联。我们发现诊断和BMI对海马体神经化学有影响,患者的Cre、Ins和Cho水平较低,而超重/肥胖受试者的这些化学物质水平较高。在控制了临床和治疗变量的仅患者模型中,我们检测到较高的BMI与较低的tNAA之间存在额外的关联,而在HSs中不存在这种关联。据我们所知,这是第一项研究BD诊断和BMI对海马体体积相对贡献的研究,也是第二项研究它们对海马体化学贡献的研究。它提供了进一步的证据,表明诊断和BMI升高都会影响与BD相关的边缘脑区。