Understanding The Role Of Muscarinic Receptors In The Pathophysiology Of Depression And Bipolar Disorder
Funder
National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Amount
$480,074.00
Summary
The causes of bipolar disorder and major depressive disorder, which effect many Australians, remain unknown. We have recently shown decreases in muscarinic receptors in the brain of people with bipolar disorder and major depressive disorder. Muscarinic receptors are important in maintaining the functions of the brain that seem to be affected in people with bipolar disorder and major depressive disorder. Here we seek to understand how changes in muscarinic receptors occur in both disorders.
Using Reward-based Biomarkers To Improve The Early Detection Of Bipolar Disorder In Individuals Seeking Treatment For Depression
Funder
National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Amount
$366,252.00
Summary
Bipolar disorder is often misdiagnosed as unipolar major depression, which can have disastrous clinical consequences. Emerging evidence indicates that individuals with bipolar disorder show particular dysfunctions within brain regions involved in processing reward. This research will use cutting-edge neuroscience methodologies to investigate reward processing in these two disorders, with the objective of identifying biological markers that help distinguish bipolar from unipolar depression.
Identifying Determinants Of Both The Origins And The Progression Of The Depressive And Bipolar (mood) Disorders.
Funder
National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Amount
$6,235,352.00
Summary
Currently, mood disorders are classified by severity, largely ignoring causes and leading to limited treatments. The Team will clarify how differing depressive and bipolar (mood) disorders are best modelled and pursue their differing causes, so assisting identification of specific treatments relating to their underlying causes. Our studies employ a range of sophisticated technologies, including molecular biology, brain imaging techniques, and mathematical modeling. The capacity of such research ....Currently, mood disorders are classified by severity, largely ignoring causes and leading to limited treatments. The Team will clarify how differing depressive and bipolar (mood) disorders are best modelled and pursue their differing causes, so assisting identification of specific treatments relating to their underlying causes. Our studies employ a range of sophisticated technologies, including molecular biology, brain imaging techniques, and mathematical modeling. The capacity of such research to advance the management of mood disorders address a pressing clinical need.Read moreRead less
Brain Connectivity Imaging Markers To Confirm Diagnosis For Bipolar Vs. Unipolar Depression – A Connectome Approach.
Funder
National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Amount
$434,369.00
Summary
Differentiating Bipolar disorders from Unipolar Depression is a major clinical challenge. This misdiagnosis hinders optimal clinical care and has many deleterious consequences such self-harm, increased chances of suicide, poor prognosis, and greater health care costs related to this disorder. This project will provide urgently-needed advance in accurate identification of Bipolar disorders using Magnetic Resonance Imaging and remove one of the key obstacles to accurate diagnosis.
Depressive And Bipolar Disorders: Causes, Presentation And Treatment Innovations
Funder
National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Amount
$7,100,605.00
Summary
Depression and bipolar disorder are two of Australia’s leading causes of disease burden, with 3-4 million Australians affected during their lifetime. However, despite being such a serious health burden, there are major shortcomings to current understanding and management. This research program aims to further our knowledge of the causes and presentations of the mood disorders, and to improve and “tailor” treatment for the many Australians who suffer from these highly disabling illnesses.
A Double-blind Controlled Trial Of RTMS In The Treatment Of Bipolar Depression
Funder
National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Amount
$401,605.00
Summary
Bipolar affective disorder (BPAD) is a serious mental illness of substantive impact but there has been relatively sparse investigation of treatments for it. One of the only substantially new treatments developed for depression in recent years has been rTMS. Repetitive TMS has been evaluated in over 30 trials conducted, but no substantive trials have explored its use in bipolar depression. We propose to do this, conducting a large scale clinical trial.
Novel Therapies, Risk Pathways And Prevention Of Mood Disorders
Funder
National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Amount
$863,413.00
Summary
Concordant with the NHMRC priorities, this fellowship will principally focus on the development of novel therapies for mood disorders. We have pilot data that the amino acid, N acetyl cysteine reduces symptoms in unipolar and bipolar disorder and schizophrenia. We will further delineate the spectrum of efficacy, mechanisms of action and tolerability profile of this and related agents. We also will study risk factors and pathways for the development of depression, to develop public health strateg ....Concordant with the NHMRC priorities, this fellowship will principally focus on the development of novel therapies for mood disorders. We have pilot data that the amino acid, N acetyl cysteine reduces symptoms in unipolar and bipolar disorder and schizophrenia. We will further delineate the spectrum of efficacy, mechanisms of action and tolerability profile of this and related agents. We also will study risk factors and pathways for the development of depression, to develop public health strategies.Read moreRead less
New research with scanning techniques has confirmed older ideas about the complementary functions of the two hemispheres of the human brain. One major contrast between the two hemispheres concerns their cognitive and emotional styles. The left hemisphere plans and confidently smooths over discrepancies that do not fit the plan while the right hemisphere looks at all possibilities and cautiously highlights the discrepancies. This research project studies the switch between the two hemispheres tha ....New research with scanning techniques has confirmed older ideas about the complementary functions of the two hemispheres of the human brain. One major contrast between the two hemispheres concerns their cognitive and emotional styles. The left hemisphere plans and confidently smooths over discrepancies that do not fit the plan while the right hemisphere looks at all possibilities and cautiously highlights the discrepancies. This research project studies the switch between the two hemispheres that alternately activates these contrasting, but equally valid, viewpoints. The switch is studied directly by optical recording from animal brains. The switch can also be studied in humans using a recent discovery from our laboratory:- that the perceptual rivalries are mediated by a hemispheric switch mechanism. Perceptual rivalry is a phenomenon where continuous, but ambiguous, stimulation leads to a back-and-forth alternation of complementary percepts, a phenomenon that fascinated Salvador Dali and is featured in many of his paintings. The nature of the perceptual switch during rivalry has been debated for centuries. New experiments link perceptual rivalry to the switch of attention between the hemispheres. Using perceptual rivalry as an indirect way to monitor hemispheric switching in humans, we discovered a remarkable feature. The back-and-forth switching process of perceptual rivalry is significantly slower in subjects with bipolar disorder (manic depression), even when they are between episodes and their mood is normal. The timing of the switching process is very stable in an individual, and appears to be similar in identical twins. The speed of the switch mechanism may therefore be inherited. Altered neural rhythms may underly the predisposition, known to run in familes, from which bipolar disorder can be triggered. The aim of the project is to test these propositions about the basis of this common disorder, affecting 1-2% of the population..Read moreRead less
Development Of A Diagnostic Test For Bipolar Disorder (BD)
Funder
National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Amount
$140,330.00
Summary
A unique test that monitors the rate of switching between the hemispheres of the brain in response to visual stimuli has been devised. A patent application covers an apparatus and test to measure the switching rate between the hemispheres and the way in which such measurements can be used as a means to diagnose bipolar disorder (BD). BD, also called manic depression, is a form of depression that currently affects over six million people worldwide with about three million in the USA alone. The co ....A unique test that monitors the rate of switching between the hemispheres of the brain in response to visual stimuli has been devised. A patent application covers an apparatus and test to measure the switching rate between the hemispheres and the way in which such measurements can be used as a means to diagnose bipolar disorder (BD). BD, also called manic depression, is a form of depression that currently affects over six million people worldwide with about three million in the USA alone. The condition has phases of mania and depression and periods of remittance. Full cycles of BD can occur as many as three times a year and for many patients, this is a lifelong condition. BD is effectively treated, once it is diagnosed. It is estimated that 20% of sufferers go undiagnosed and many more are misdiagnosed. The cost of mis- or non-diagnosis is measured by suicides, the financial burden on society with health care, loss of productivity etc, effects on family and associates, crime, etc. Diagnosis to date is achieved mainly by subjective means such as questionnaires. These instruments do not conclusively separate BD from other forms of depression and schizophrenia, for which treatment is quite different. Nor do they allow for factors such as substance abuse and other medical conditions that the patient may be suffering. BD is hereditary with the slow hemispheric switch rate being an indicator of the genetic trait. This phenomenon allows for an objective test for BD, even if an individual has not had an episode of BD. The slow switch allows relatively easy separation of a BD patient from those exhibiting symptoms that may have other causes.Read moreRead less