Endothelial Function in Youth With Bipolar Disorder
Kody G. Kennedy, Sudhir Karthikeyan, Alysha A. Sultan, Brian W. McCrindle, Gregory E. Miller, Benjamin I. Goldstein
Abstract
Bipolar disorder (BD) confers risk for accelerated atherosclerosis and early cardiovascular disease (CVD). In adults, mood symptom burden is associated with CVD. Here we examine endothelial dysfunction, considered an early predictor of CVD, in relation to mood states and symptoms among youth with BD. criteria. Reactive hyperemia index (RHI), a measure of endothelial function, was assessed non-invasively via pulse amplitude tonometry (PAT). RHI was compared across 4 groups: BD-euthymic (n = 34), BD-depressed (n = 36), BD-hypomanic/mixed (n = 44), and HC (n = 95) controlling for age, sex, and obesity. Analyses also examined for RHI-mood associations in the overall BD group. = .006, β = 0.26), but not depression scores. All analyses remained significant in sensitivity analyses further controlling for cardiovascular risk factors and for current lithium, second-generation antipsychotic, and any medication use. We found that symptomatic youth with BD have anomalous RHI, which varies according to mood polarity. Future studies in larger samples, with prospective repeated measures, should investigate whether endothelial dysfunction partially subserves the psychiatric symptoms and cardiovascular risk observed in BD.