Stronger Neural Connections May Trump Genetic Risk for Bipolar Disorder

Healthy siblings of people with the condition harbor more cohesive connections within certain brain networks.

Written byAggie Mika
| 2 min read

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FAMILY RESEMBLANCE: A new study reveals clues to how most siblings of people with bipolar avoid the disease.© ISTOCK.COM/IMRSQUID

The paper G.E. Doucet et al., “The role of intrinsic brain functional connectivity in vulnerability and resilience to bipolar disorder,” Am J Psychiat, doi:10.1176/appi.ajp.2017.17010095, 2017. Ties that don’t bind Bipolar disorder often runs in families, but genetics alone don’t determine whether one develops the disease, says Sophia Frangou of the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai. She and her colleagues wondered why siblings of affected people, despite having a slightly higher chance of developing mental illness, typically don’t. In sync Using fMRI, Frangou’s group previously found that, compared with the brains of bipolar patients, certain regions within healthy siblings’ brains responded more synchronously during memory and emotional processing tasks. To find out whether this reflects differences in brain organization, postdoc Gaelle Doucet imaged 78 ...

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November 2017

The Mosaic Brain

Functional implications of a complex neural ecosystem

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