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1.
J Psychiatr Res ; 42(6): 451-7, 2008 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17628595

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: To assess the effectiveness and tolerability of open adjunctive zonisamide in treatment of obesity in euthymic bipolar disorder (BD) patients. METHOD: Zonisamide was administered to recovered, overweight BD outpatients assessed with the Systematic Treatment Enhancement Program for Bipolar Disorders (STEP-BD) Affective Disorders Evaluation and followed with the STEP-BD Clinical Monitoring Form. Weight changes (Body Mass Index (BMI) and BMI percentage changes) were assessed prospectively at four weekly visits, one bi-weekly visit, and then five monthly visits, for a maximal duration of six months. Weight loss was assessed with random effects modeling to maximize all available data for analysis. RESULTS: Twenty-five BD (10 BD-type I, 15 BD-type II) patients (mean age 41.0+/-10.4 years, 64% female, 96% Caucasian) on a mean of 2.8+/-1.5 prescription psychotropic and 1.3+/-1.4 prescription non-psychotropic medications received zonisamide for a mean duration of 14.2+/-8.5 weeks, with a mean final dose of 375+/-206 (range 75-800) mg/day. Slope of weight loss was 0.078 BMI points per week, and non-zero (p<0.0005). Mean weight loss was 1.2+/-1.9 BMI points (baseline BMI 34.2+/-3.1 to final BMI 33.0+/-3.5, p<0.003). Eighteen patients (72%) discontinued study participation early, 11/25 (44%) due to emergent mood symptoms (eight depression, two mania, one subsyndromal mixed symptoms) requiring treatment intervention, 5/25 (20%) due to adverse physical events, and 2/25 (8%) due to patient choice, but none due to weight loss inefficacy. CONCLUSION: Adjunctive zonisamide appeared effective and generally physically tolerated, but had high rates of mood adverse events, in obese BD patients. Controlled trials are warranted to systematically explore these preliminary naturalistic observations.


Subject(s)
Antidepressive Agents/therapeutic use , Bipolar Disorder/epidemiology , Dysthymic Disorder/epidemiology , Obesity/prevention & control , Weight Loss , Adult , Body Mass Index , Female , Humans , Male , Pilot Projects , Prospective Studies
2.
J Psychiatr Res ; 38(1): 47-61, 2004 Jan.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-14690770

ABSTRACT

For over a century, clinicians have struggled with how to conceptualize the primary psychoses, which include psychotic mood disorders and schizophrenia. Indeed, the nature of the relationship between mood disorders and schizophrenia is an area of ongoing controversy. Psychotic bipolar disorders have characteristics such as phenomenology, biology, therapeutic response, and brain imaging findings, suggesting both commonalities with and dissociations from schizophrenia. Taken together, these characteristics are in some instances most consistent with a dimensional view, with psychotic bipolar disorders being intermediate between non-psychotic bipolar disorders and schizophrenia spectrum disorders. However, in other instances, a categorical approach appears useful. Although more research is clearly necessary to address the dimensional versus categorical controversy, it is feasible that at least in the interim, a mixed dimensional/categorical approach could provide additional insights into pathophysiology and management options, which would not be available utilizing only one of these models.


Subject(s)
Affective Disorders, Psychotic/diagnosis , Bipolar Disorder/diagnosis , Schizophrenia/diagnosis , Schizophrenic Psychology , Affective Disorders, Psychotic/classification , Affective Disorders, Psychotic/genetics , Bipolar Disorder/classification , Bipolar Disorder/genetics , Bipolar Disorder/psychology , Brain/pathology , Brain/physiopathology , Diagnostic Imaging , Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders , Gene Expression/physiology , Genetic Predisposition to Disease/genetics , Humans , Psychiatric Status Rating Scales , Risk Factors , Schizophrenia/classification , Schizophrenia/genetics , Social Environment
3.
Ann Clin Psychiatry ; 15(2): 95-108, 2003 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-12938867

ABSTRACT

Anticonvulsant drugs (ACs) have diverse antiseizure, psychotropic, and biochemical effects. Carbamazepine and valproate have mood-stabilizing actions, benzodiazepines and gabapentin have anxiolytic actions, lamotrigine is useful in rapid cycling and acute treatment and prophylaxis of bipolar depression, and topiramate and zonisamide can yield weight loss. Limited controlled data suggest the carbamazepine keto derivative oxcarbazepine has antimanic effects. A categorical approach to the diverse roles of ACs in bipolar disorders is proposed, using broad categories of ACs, on the basis of their predominant psychotropic profiles. Thus, some ACs have "sedating" profiles that may include sedation, cognitive difficulties, fatigue, weight gain, and possibly antimanic and/or anxiolytic effects. In contrast, some newer ACs have "activating" profiles that may include improved energy, weight loss, and possibly antidepressant and even anxiogenic effects. Still other newer ACs have novel "mixed" profiles, combining sedation and weight loss. A categorical-mechanistic extension of this approach is also presented, with hypotheses that "sedating" profiles might be related to prominent potentiation of gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA) inhibitory neurotransmission, "activating" profiles could be related to prominent attenuation of glutamate excitatory neurotransmission, and for "mixed" profiles, sedation and weight loss might be related to concurrent GABAergic and antiglutamatergic actions, respectively. The categorical approach may have utility as an aid to clinicians in reinforcing the heterogeneity ACs, and recalling psychotropic profiles of individual ACs, but is limited as it fails to address the etiology of the heterogeneity of AC psychotropic effects. The categorical-mechanistic extension strives to address this issue, but requires systematic clinical investigation of more precise relationships between psychotropic profiles and discrete mechanisms of action to assess its merits.


Subject(s)
Anticonvulsants/therapeutic use , Bipolar Disorder/drug therapy , Affect/drug effects , Bipolar Disorder/metabolism , Bipolar Disorder/psychology , Brain/drug effects , Brain/metabolism , Humans , Neurotransmitter Agents/metabolism , Treatment Outcome
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