Title of article :
Minor hemoglobins HbA2 and HbF associate with disease severity in bipolar disorder with a likely protective role of HbA2 against post-partum episodes
Author/Authors :
?nce، نويسنده , , Bahri and Guloksuz، نويسنده , , Sinan and Alt?nba?، نويسنده , , Kür?at and Oral، نويسنده , , Esat Timuçin and Alpkan، نويسنده , , Latif Ruh?at and Altinoz، نويسنده , , Meric A.، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2013
Abstract :
AbstractBackground
exist studies indicating that bipolar disorder (BD) associates with changes in brain blood flow. Human brain with its high demand to oxygen constitutes 2% of the total body weight, while it receives 20% of cardiac output. α and β globin chains of hemoglobin were recently found in neural tissues, yet no study has questioned blood hemoglobins in BD.
s
l of 120 euthymic BD patients (40 males and 80 females) were analyzed via high performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) to measure minor hemoglobin levels, which were statistically compared with disease characteristics.
s
hemoglobins HbA2 and HbF associated positively with episode density as a measure of disease severity in BD. An increased level of HbA2 meant significantly less postpartum episodes in child bearing women. HbF levels were higher in patients with a positive family history of any psychotic disorder. Sum of HbA2 and HbF correlated with episode density with a stronger significance (p<0.001) supporting intermittent hypoxia hypothesis in BD.
tions
udy was conducted only on euthymic patients to avoid likely bigger exogenous effects such as electro-convulsive therapy and diverse drug regimes, yet larger comparative studies are needed to support our current findings.
sions
HbA2 and HbF in more severe bipolar disorder may be compensations against intermittent hypoxias in BD. HbA2 increases following myocardial angina and in mountain dwellers, which may indicate protective roles in extreme conditions. HbF increase may act more as a maladaptation or emerge via haplotypal associations of BD genes and gamma-globin locus at 11p15.5.
Keywords :
bipolar disorder , Fetal hemoglobin , Hemoglobin A2 , Episode density , Postpartum episode , intermittent hypoxia
Journal title :
Journal of Affective Disorders
Journal title :
Journal of Affective Disorders