If only mood rings really worked. With no easy test for mood disorders,
doctors must rely on patients' subjective reports of their emotional
states to make a diagnosis. But help may be on the way-researchers have
discovered markers of depression and mania in blood, taking a
significant step toward developing a blood test for mood.



A team of molecular psychiatrists led by Alexander Niculescu of the
Indiana University School of Medicine <http://www.medicine.iu.edu> 
extracted RNA-genetic material that turns genes on and off-from the
blood of people with bipolar disorder. The researchers identified 10
genes that display different patterns of activity during episodes of
depression and mania. "We were pleased and surprised to get a blood
readout that correlates with symptoms of the illness and things that
happen in the brain," Niculescu says. The changes in genetic
activity indicate high and low moods with 60 to 80 percent accuracy.

Five of the genes are involved with myelin, the white matter that
insulates neurons and facilitates their communication. Myelin deficits
have been associated with schizophrenia and alcoholism, but whether they
are a cause or a symptom of these diseases is unknown. Nevertheless,
such deficits could serve as a red flag.



"To find particular biomarkers for mental illness is very
significant," says Akira Sawa of Johns Hopkins University
<http://www.jhu.edu> , who is searching for similar signposts of
schizophrenia.


Broader studies must be done to assess how time, gender and medications
may influence gene expression, but Niculescu expects a blood test for
mood disorders to be available within about five years. "Having an
objective test for a disease state, its severity and especially its
response to treatment would be a big step forward," he says.

Happy Learning,


Yovan P. Putra
www.primastudy.com <http://www.primastudy.com/>
Expand your genius through  Total-Mind Learning  Series coaching 
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