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. 2020 Nov;22(7):711-721.
doi: 10.1111/bdi.12927. Epub 2020 May 16.

Allostatic load, emotional hyper-reactivity, and functioning in individuals with bipolar disorder

Affiliations

Allostatic load, emotional hyper-reactivity, and functioning in individuals with bipolar disorder

Aroldo A Dargél et al. Bipolar Disord. 2020 Nov.

Abstract

Objectives: Diagnosis and management of bipolar disorder (BD) are limited by the absence of available biomarkers. Allostatic load (AL) represents the strain that stress, including the effects of acute phases and inter-episode chronic mood instability, exerts on interconnected biological systems. This study aimed to operationalize an AL index and explore whether it could be relevant to better characterize BD patients with and without emotional hyper-reactivity particularly those at higher risk of immune-cardiometabolic dysregulation and functional impairment.

Methods: Levels of biomarkers of chronic inflammation (hsCRP and albumin), cardiovascular (systolic/diastolic blood pressure) and metabolic functions (fasting glucose, glycosylated hemoglobin, total cholesterol, LDL, HDL, and triglycerides) were measured in 1072 adult BD outpatients. Patients were classified in two groups (with/without emotional hyper-reactivity) assessed by the Multidimensional Assessment of Thymic States scale. An Allostatic Load Index for BD (BALLI), comprising six biomarkers, was constructed using data-driven biomarker selection.

Results: BALLI showed 81.1% accuracy with good sensitivity (81%) and specificity (81.2%) for characterizing BD patients presenting emotional hyper-reactivity, elevated risk of inflammation (increased hsCRP, hypoalbuminemia) and cardiometabolic disturbances (hypertension, hyperglycemia, and hypertriglyceridemia). Patients classified by the BALLI as presenting emotional hyper-reactivity had significantly lower global and cognitive functioning than those without emotional hyper-reactivity (P < .0001).

Conclusions: A multidimensional approach based on a simple AL score (eg, BALLI) and dimensions of behavior (eg, emotional hyper-reactivity) alongside mood is clinically relevant. AL index could be a useful tool to detect multisystemic physiological dysregulations in BD patients with/without emotional hyper-reactivity particularly those at higher risk of immune-cardiometabolic disturbances and functional impairment.

Keywords: allostatic load; biomarkers; bipolar disorder; emotional reactivity; functioning.

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