Abstract

While widespread cortical and subcortical brain functional abnormalities have been found in bipolar disorder, the changes that take place between illness phases and recovery are less clearly documented. Only a small number of longitudinal studies of manic patients, in particular, have been carried out. Twenty-six bipolar patients underwent fMRI during performance of the n-back working memory task when manic and again after recovery. Twenty-six matched healthy controls were also scanned on two occasions. Task-related activations and de-activations were examined. When manic, the patients showed clusters of significantly reduced activation in the left dorsolateral prefrontal cortex (DLPFC)/precentral cortex and the parietal cortex/superior precuneus bilaterally. They also showed failure of de-activation in the ventromedial frontal cortex (vmPFC). After recovery, activation in the left DLPFC/precentral cortex and in the bilateral parietal cortex/superior precuneus clusters increased significantly. However, failure of de-activation remained present in the vmPFC. Recovery from mania is associated with normalization of DLPFC and parietal hypoactivation, but not with vmPFC failure of de-activation, which accordingly appears to represent a trait abnormality in the disorder.

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