Evmorfia Psara, Sousana K Papadopoulou, Maria Mentzelou, Gavriela Voulgaridou, Theophanis Vorvolakos, Thomas Apostolou, Constantinos Giaginis
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Background: Bipolar disorder is a chronic mental disease that is characterized by depressive and manic episodes. Antipsychotics and mood stabilizers are known therapies that work, but their restrictions and disadvantages resulted in the need for complementary and alternative therapies, such as natural compounds. Omega-3 fatty acids, as basic ingredients of fishes and seafood, play crucial roles in brain development, function of brain membrane enzymes, learning, and many other instances, and their deficiency has been associated with many mental diseases, including bipolar disorder.
Methods: The present narrative review aims to critically summarize and scrutinize the available clinical studies on the use of omega-3 fatty acids in the management and co-treatment of bipolar disorder episodes and symptoms. For this purpose, a thorough and in-depth search was performed in the most accurate scientific databases, e.g., PubMed., Scopus, Web of Science, Cochrane, Embase, and Google Scholar, applying effective and relevant keywords.
Results: There are currently several clinical studies that assessed the effect of omega-3 fatty acids on the severity of BD symptoms. Some of them supported evidence for the potential beneficial impact of omega-3 fatty acids supplementation in the prevention and/or co-treatment of bipolar disorder severity and symptomatology. Nevertheless, a considerable number of clinical studies did not show high efficiency, rendering the existing data rather conflicting. The above may be ascribed to the fact that there is a high heterogeneity amongst the available clinical studies concerning the dosage, the administration duration, the combination of fatty acids administration, the method designs and protocols, and the study populations.
Conclusion: Although the currently available clinical evidence seems promising, it is highly recommended to accomplish larger, long-term, randomized, double-blind, controlled clinical trials with a prospective design in order to derive conclusive results as to whether omega-fatty acids could act as a co-treatment agent or even as protective factors against bipolar disorder symptomatology. Drug design strategies could be developed to derive novel synthetic omega-3 fatty acids analogs, which could be tested for their potential to attenuate the severity of BD episodes and symptoms.
期刊介绍:
Marine Drugs (ISSN 1660-3397) publishes reviews, regular research papers and short notes on the research, development and production of drugs from the sea. Our aim is to encourage scientists to publish their experimental and theoretical research in as much detail as possible, particularly synthetic procedures and characterization information for bioactive compounds. There is no restriction on the length of the experimental section.