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Aims and structure of the German Research Consortium BipoLife for the study of bipolar disorder.

Authors :
Ritter, Philipp
Bermpohl, Felix
Gruber, Oliver
Hautzinger, Martin
Jansen, Andreas
Juckel, Georg
Kircher, Tilo
Lambert, Martin
Mulert, Christoph
Pfennig, Andrea
Reif, Andreas
Rienhoff, Otto
Schulze, Thomas
Severus, Emanuel
Stamm, Thomas
Bauer, Michael
Source :
International Journal of Bipolar Disorders. 11/21/2016, Vol. 4 Issue 1, p1-9. 9p.
Publication Year :
2016

Abstract

Background: Bipolar disorder is a severe and heterogeneous mental disorder. Despite great advances in neuroscience over the past decades, the precise causative mechanisms at the transmitter, cellular or network level have so far not been unraveled. As a result, individual treatment decisions cannot be tailor-made and the uncertain prognosis is based on clinical characteristics alone. Although a subpopulation of patients have an excellent response to pharmacological monotherapy, other subpopulations have been less well served by the medical system and therefore require more focused attention. In particular individuals at high risk of bipolar disorder, young patients in the early stages of bipolar disorder, patients with an unstable highly relapsing course and patients with acute suicidal ideation have been identified as those in need. Structure: A research consortium of ten universities across Germany has therefore implemented a 4 year research agenda including three randomized controlled trials, one epidemiological trial and one cross-sectional trial to address these areas of unmet needs. The topics under investigation will be the improvement of early recognition, specific psychotherapy, and smartphones as an aid for early episode detection and biomarkers of lithium response. A subset of patients will be investigated utilizing neuroimaging (fMRI), neurophysiology (EEG), and biomaterials (genomics, transcriptomics). Conclusions: This article aims to outline the rationale, design, and methods of these individual studies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
21947511
Volume :
4
Issue :
1
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
International Journal of Bipolar Disorders
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
119596813
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1186/s40345-016-0066-0