Plasma glutathione suggests oxidative stress is equally present in early- and late- onset bipolar disorder
Date
2018-03Author
Singh, Nisha
McMahon, Hannah
Bilderbeck, Amy
Reed, Zoe E
Tunbridge, Elizabeth
Brett, Daniel
Geddes, John R
Goodwin, Guy M
Metadata
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Singh, Nisha; McMahon, Hannah; Bilderbeck, Amy; Reed, Zoe E; Tunbridge, Elizabeth; Brett, Daniel; Geddes, John R; Churchill, Grant C; Goodwin, Guy M. Plasma glutathione suggests oxidative stress is equally present in early- and late- onset bipolar disorder. Bipolar Disorders. 2018;1–7.
Abstract
We previously demonstrated oxidative stress in bipolar patients and a
relationship between the age of illness onset and total glutathione, a principal antioxi-
dant. In this study, we sought to replicate these findings in a new cohort of patients.
Methods: We recruited bipolar patients from Warneford Hospital, Oxford, UK, of
similar age and grouped them according to age of onset of illness. The early- onset
group comprised patients with onset at <23 years, and the late group comprised pa-
tients with onset at >30 years. A third group, comprising age- matched healthy volun-
teers, was also included. Reduced and oxidized glutathione, cysteine, and cystine
were determined in plasma, using high- performance liquid chromatography.
Mitochondrial DNA copy number, measured in whole blood, was also compared be-
tween patients and healthy controls.
Results: Significant increases in oxidative stress were observed in the patient groups,
compared with the control group; however, no differences in glutathione- related oxi-
dative stress measures were detected between the early- and late- onset bipolar pa-
tient groups. No differences were observed in the amount of mitochondrial DNA,
and there was no correlation with mood state.
Conclusion: Using a more accurate method to quantify oxidative stress than in our
previous study, we show that oxidative stress is a consistent feature of bipolar disor-
der. Although we did not reproduce our finding correlating age of onset of illness to
oxidative stress, we have shown, once again, that oxidative stress is a consistent fea-
ture of bipolar disorder
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