Electrodermal activity in bipolar disorder: Differences between mood episodes and clinical remission using a wearable device in a real-world clinical setting

Bipolar disorder (BD) lacks objective measures for illness activity and treatment response. Electrodermal activity (EDA) is a quantitative measure of autonomic function, which is altered in manic and depressive episodes. We aimed to explore differences in EDA (1) inter-individually: between patients...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of affective disorders 2024-01, Vol.345, p.43-50
Hauptverfasser: Anmella, Gerard, Mas, Ariadna, Sanabra, Miriam, Valenzuela-Pascual, Clàudia, Valentí, Marc, Pacchiarotti, Isabella, Benabarre, Antoni, Grande, Iria, De Prisco, Michele, Oliva, Vincenzo, Fico, Giovanna, Giménez-Palomo, Anna, Bastidas, Anna, Agasi, Isabel, Young, Allan H., Garriga, Marina, Corponi, Filippo, Li, Bryan M., de Looff, Peter, Vieta, Eduard, Hidalgo-Mazzei, Diego
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Bipolar disorder (BD) lacks objective measures for illness activity and treatment response. Electrodermal activity (EDA) is a quantitative measure of autonomic function, which is altered in manic and depressive episodes. We aimed to explore differences in EDA (1) inter-individually: between patients with BD on acute mood episodes, euthymic states and healthy controls (HC), and (2) intra-individually: longitudinally within patients during acute mood episodes of BD and after clinical remission. A longitudinal observational study. EDA was recorded using a research-grade wearable in patients with BD during acute manic and depressive episodes and at clinical remission. Euthymic BD patients and HC were recorded during a single session. We compared EDA parameters derived from the tonic (mean EDA, mEDA) and phasic components (EDA peaks per minute, pmEDA, and EDA peaks mean amplitude, pmaEDA). Inter- and intra-individual comparisons were computed respectively with ANOVA and paired t-tests. 49 patients with BD (15 manic, 9 depressed, and 25 euthymic), and 19 HC were included. Patients with bipolar depression showed significantly reduced mEDA (p = 0.003) and pmEDA (p = 0.001), which increased to levels similar to euthymia or HC after clinical remission (mEDA, p = 0.011; pmEDA, p 
ISSN:0165-0327
1573-2517
DOI:10.1016/j.jad.2023.10.125