Introduction: Antibiomania is characterized by the emergence of a manic episode in reaction to antibiotics. Although relatively uncommon, this kind of side effect is observed in a growing number of cases and mostly occurs in patients who do not have a history of bipolar disorder. Several dozen cases have been reported showing the onset of manic symptoms after taking antibiotics. The antibiotic most frequently involved is clarithromycin.
Clinical Case: We report the case of a 61-year-old patient who presented a manic episode after taking an antibiotic combination to treat Helicobacter pylori. Five days after the start of highly active antiretroviral therapy (HAART), behavioral problems appeared (aggressiveness, irritability, talkativeness, insomnia). At the time of hospitalization, she had an acute delusional symptomatology, with a theme of persecution, associated with intuitive, interpretive and imaginative mechanisms. Manic symptoms were obvious: psychomotor excitement, aggressiveness and irritability, flight of ideas, verbal disinhibition and a denial of problems. There was no toxic cause. Brain magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) was normal. Her condition improved very quickly and delusions disappeared in four days. Mrs. H. could critic her delirium and recovered a euthymic state. During hospitalization, treatment divalproate sodium was introduced (250mg, 3 times a day), was maintained following hospital discharge for 2 years for prevention, and then decreased to the stop. There are currently no further behavioral problems or sleep disorders two years after this episode.
Discussion: Facing this clinical case, several questions arise: Which drug therapy is the most suitable for this type of mental disorder? Are there predictors of antibiomania? Is there a risk of recurrence of mood episodes following an antibiomania that occurs spontaneously? What are the pathophysiological mechanisms that could explain this reaction? In all cases identified, stopping the antibiotics was decisive. However, the introduction of a psychotropic and the duration of this treatment remain unclear. First, longitudinal follow-up would assess this variable. Second, it is unclear whether the presence of personal psychiatric history is a predictor of antibiomania. Finally, there are several hypotheses to explain antibiomania: the competitive effect of GABAergic inhibitory receptors, seizure-like phenomena that mimic psychiatric symptoms, and disruption of the intestinal microbiota by antibiotics leading to a modification of the functioning of the central nervous system. The explanatory model of antibiomania is not yet known and requires further research.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.encep.2015.06.008 | DOI Listing |
Mol Psychiatry
January 2025
Department of Psychiatry, University of Oxford, Oxford, UK.
Cognitive and neural mechanisms underlying bipolar disorder (BD) and its treatment are still poorly understood. Here we examined the role of adaptations in risk-taking using a reward-guided decision-making task. We recruited volunteers with high (n = 40) scores on the Mood Disorder Questionnaire, MDQ, suspected of high risk for bipolar disorder and those with low-risk scores (n = 37).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMed Health Care Philos
January 2025
Department of Philosophy, University of Bristol, Bristol, UK.
Silence is a byword for socially imposed harm in the burgeoning literature on epistemic injustice in psychiatry. While some silence is harmful and should be broken, this understanding of silence is untenably simplistic. Crucially, it neglects the possibility that silence can also play a constructive epistemic role in the lives of people with mental illness.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBrain Imaging Behav
January 2025
Key Laboratory of Adolescent Cyberpsychology and Behavior (Ministry of Education), Wuhan, China.
Bipolar disorder (BD) is a complex psychiatric condition marked by significant mood fluctuations that deeply affect quality of life. Understanding the neural mechanisms underlying BD is critical for improving diagnostic accuracy and developing more effective treatments. This study utilized resting-state functional magnetic resonance imaging (rs-fMRI) to investigate functional connectivity within the ventral and dorsal attention networks in 52 patients with BD and 51 healthy controls.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAnn Gen Psychiatry
January 2025
AbbVie, North Chicago, IL, USA.
Background: Atypical antipsychotics are a common treatment for serious mental illness, but many are associated with adverse effects, including weight gain and cardiovascular issues, and real-world experience may differ from clinical trial data. Cariprazine has previously demonstrated a favorable safety and tolerability profile in clinical trials. Here, we evaluated the effects of cariprazine on body weight and blood pressure for bipolar I disorder (BP-I), schizophrenia, or as adjunctive treatment for major depressive disorder (MDD) using real-world data.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIndian J Psychiatry
December 2024
Department of Psychiatry, All India Institute of Medical Sciences (AIIMS), Bathinda, Punjab, India E-mail:
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