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Animal models of recurrent or bipolar depression.
Neuroscience. 2016 May 03; 321:189-196.N

Abstract

Animal models of mental disorders should ideally have construct, face, and predictive validity, but current animal models do not always satisfy these validity criteria. Additionally, animal models of depression rely mainly on stress-induced behavioral changes. These stress-induced models have limited validity, because stress is not a risk factor specific to depression, and the models do not recapitulate the recurrent and spontaneous nature of depressive episodes. Although animal models exhibiting recurrent depressive episodes or bipolar depression have not yet been established, several researchers are trying to generate such animals by modeling clinical risk factors as well as by manipulating a specific neural circuit using emerging techniques.

Authors+Show Affiliations

Laboratory for Molecular Dynamics of Mental Disorders, RIKEN Brain Science Institute, Japan. Electronic address: kato@brain.riken.jp.Laboratory for Molecular Dynamics of Mental Disorders, RIKEN Brain Science Institute, Japan.Laboratory for Molecular Dynamics of Mental Disorders, RIKEN Brain Science Institute, Japan.Laboratory for Molecular Dynamics of Mental Disorders, RIKEN Brain Science Institute, Japan.Laboratory for Molecular Dynamics of Mental Disorders, RIKEN Brain Science Institute, Japan.

Pub Type(s)

Journal Article
Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
Review

Language

eng

PubMed ID

26265551

Citation

Kato, T, et al. "Animal Models of Recurrent or Bipolar Depression." Neuroscience, vol. 321, 2016, pp. 189-196.
Kato T, Kasahara T, Kubota-Sakashita M, et al. Animal models of recurrent or bipolar depression. Neuroscience. 2016;321:189-196.
Kato, T., Kasahara, T., Kubota-Sakashita, M., Kato, T. M., & Nakajima, K. (2016). Animal models of recurrent or bipolar depression. Neuroscience, 321, 189-196. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.neuroscience.2015.08.016
Kato T, et al. Animal Models of Recurrent or Bipolar Depression. Neuroscience. 2016 May 3;321:189-196. PubMed PMID: 26265551.
* Article titles in AMA citation format should be in sentence-case
TY - JOUR T1 - Animal models of recurrent or bipolar depression. AU - Kato,T, AU - Kasahara,T, AU - Kubota-Sakashita,M, AU - Kato,T M, AU - Nakajima,K, Y1 - 2015/08/08/ PY - 2015/4/10/received PY - 2015/7/14/revised PY - 2015/8/6/accepted PY - 2015/8/13/entrez PY - 2015/8/13/pubmed PY - 2016/12/15/medline KW - bipolar disorder KW - depressive disorder KW - model mice SP - 189 EP - 196 JF - Neuroscience JO - Neuroscience VL - 321 N2 - Animal models of mental disorders should ideally have construct, face, and predictive validity, but current animal models do not always satisfy these validity criteria. Additionally, animal models of depression rely mainly on stress-induced behavioral changes. These stress-induced models have limited validity, because stress is not a risk factor specific to depression, and the models do not recapitulate the recurrent and spontaneous nature of depressive episodes. Although animal models exhibiting recurrent depressive episodes or bipolar depression have not yet been established, several researchers are trying to generate such animals by modeling clinical risk factors as well as by manipulating a specific neural circuit using emerging techniques. SN - 1873-7544 UR - https://www.unboundmedicine.com/medline/citation/26265551/Animal_models_of_recurrent_or_bipolar_depression_ DB - PRIME DP - Unbound Medicine ER -