Frontiers in Nutrition (Jun 2019)

Weight Gain During Treatment of Bipolar Disorder (BD)—Facts and Therapeutic Options

  • Harald Mangge,
  • Susanne Bengesser,
  • Nina Dalkner,
  • Armin Birner,
  • Frederike Fellendorf,
  • Martina Platzer,
  • Robert Queissner,
  • Rene Pilz,
  • Alexander Maget,
  • Bernd Reininghaus,
  • Carlo Hamm,
  • Konstantin Bauer,
  • Alexandra Rieger,
  • Sieglinde Zelzer,
  • Dietmar Fuchs,
  • Eva Reininghaus

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fnut.2019.00076
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 6

Abstract

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Bipolar disorder (BPD) is a mood disorder, which is characterized by alternating affective states, namely (hypo)mania, depression, and euthymia. Evidence is growing that BPD has indeed a biologic substrate characterized by chronic inflammation, oxidative stress, and disturbed energy metabolism. Apart from this, there is obviously a hereditary component of this disease with multi-genetic factors. Most probably a susceptibility threshold favors the outbreak of clinical disease after a cascade of stress events that remain to be elucidated in more detail. Evidence is also growing that weak points in brain energy metabolism contribute to outbreak and severity of BPD. Conventional psychopharmacologic therapy must be reassessed under the aspects of weight cycling and development of central obesity as a deterioration factor for a worse clinical course leading to early cardiovascular events in BPD subgroups.

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