Karoline Krane-Gartiser
Norwegian University of Science and Technology
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Featured researches published by Karoline Krane-Gartiser.
PLOS ONE | 2014
Karoline Krane-Gartiser; Tone Elise Gjøtterud Henriksen; Gunnar Morken; Arne E. Vaaler; Ole Bernt Fasmer
Introduction Mania is associated with increased activity, whereas psychomotor retardation is often found in bipolar depression. Actigraphy is a promising tool for monitoring phase shifts and changes following treatment in bipolar disorder. The aim of this study was to compare recordings of motor activity in mania, bipolar depression and healthy controls, using linear and nonlinear analytical methods. Materials and Methods Recordings from 18 acutely hospitalized inpatients with mania were compared to 12 recordings from bipolar depression inpatients and 28 healthy controls. 24-hour actigraphy recordings and 64-minute periods of continuous motor activity in the morning and evening were analyzed. Mean activity and several measures of variability and complexity were calculated. Results Patients with depression had a lower mean activity level compared to controls, but higher variability shown by increased standard deviation (SD) and root mean square successive difference (RMSSD) over 24 hours and in the active morning period. The patients with mania had lower first lag autocorrelation compared to controls, and Fourier analysis showed higher variance in the high frequency part of the spectrum corresponding to the period from 2–8 minutes. Both patient groups had a higher RMSSD/SD ratio compared to controls. In patients with mania we found an increased complexity of time series in the active morning period, compared to patients with depression. The findings in the patients with mania are similar to previous findings in patients with schizophrenia and healthy individuals treated with a glutamatergic antagonist. Conclusion We have found distinctly different activity patterns in hospitalized patients with bipolar disorder in episodes of mania and depression, assessed by actigraphy and analyzed with linear and nonlinear mathematical methods, as well as clear differences between the patients and healthy comparison subjects.
Nordic Journal of Psychiatry | 2011
Karoline Krane-Gartiser; Leif Breum; Charlotte Glümer; Allan Linneberg; Maiken Madsen; Anne Køster; Pw Jepsen; Anders Fink-Jensen
Background: The incidence of the metabolic syndrome, a major risk factor for diabetes and cardiovascular disease, is increasing worldwide and is suggested to be higher among psychiatric patients, especially those on antipsychotic treatment. Aims: To assess the prevalence of the metabolic syndrome in Danish psychiatric outpatients and compare it with the general population. Methods: In a cross-sectional, observational study in 2007–08, 170 Danish outpatients on antipsychotic drug treatment were monitored for the prevalence of the metabolic syndrome based on the International Diabetes Federation (IDF) definition and compared with a general population group of 3303 randomly selected Danes. Results: Of the antipsychotic-treated patients 48.2% fulfilled the IDF criteria for the metabolic syndrome, compared with 29.6% of the general population. The antipsychotic-treated patients had higher rates of increased waist circumference, triglyceride and glucose levels, and lower high-density lipoprotein cholesterol. Compared with the general population, the odds ratio (OR) of the metabolic syndrome among antipsychotic-treated patients was 2.2. After adjustment for age and sex, the OR increased to 2.7. In the antipsychotic-treated group, statistically different rates of the metabolic syndrome for patients in monopharmacy vs. polypharmacy, and for patients in monotherapy with first-generation vs. second-generation antipsychotics, could not be found. Conclusion: The metabolic syndrome is highly prevalent among a Danish outpatient population treated with antipsychotics compared with the general population. Monitoring of lipid and glucose levels, blood pressure and waist circumference before start-up and during treatment with antipsychotic medication is of pivotal importance in order to prevent diabetes and cardiovascular disease in this patient population.
Trials | 2014
Mette Kvisten Steinan; Karoline Krane-Gartiser; Knut Langsrud; Trond Sand; Håvard Kallestad; Gunnar Morken
BackgroundPatients with bipolar disorder experience sleep disturbance, even in euthymic phases. Changes in sleep pattern are frequent signs of a new episode of (hypo)mania or depression. Cognitive behavioral therapy for insomnia (CBT-I) is an effective treatment for primary insomnia, but there are no published results on the effects of CBT-I in patients with bipolar disorder. In this randomized controlled trial, we wish to compare CBT-I and treatment as usual with treatment as usual alone to determine its effect in improving quality of sleep, stabilizing minor mood variations and preventing new mood episodes in euthymic patients with bipolar disorder and comorbid insomnia.MethodsPatients with euthymic bipolar I or II disorder and insomnia, as verified by the Structured Clinical Interview for DSM Disorders (SCID-1) assessment, will be included. The patients enter a three-week run-in phase in which they complete a sleep diary and a mood diary, are monitored for seven consecutive days with an actigraph and on two of these nights with polysomnography in addition before randomization to an eight-week treatment trial. Treatment as usual consists of pharmacological and supportive psychosocial treatment. In this trial, CBT-I will consist of sleep restriction, psychoeducation about sleep, stabilization of the circadian rhythm, and challenging and correcting sleep state misperception, in three to eight sessions.DiscussionThis trial could document a new treatment for insomnia in bipolar disorder with possible effects on sleep and on stability of mood. In addition, more precise information can be obtained about the character of sleep disturbance in bipolar disorder.Trial registrationClinicalTrials.gov:NCT01704352.
The Journal of Clinical Psychiatry | 2015
Karoline Krane-Gartiser; Tone Eg Henriksen; Arne E. Vaaler; Ole Bernt Fasmer; Gunnar Morken
OBJECTIVE To compare the activity patterns of inpatients with unipolar depression, who had been divided into groups with and without motor retardation prior to actigraphy monitoring. METHOD Twenty-four-hour actigraphy recordings from 52 consecutively, acutely admitted inpatients with unipolar depression (ICD-10) were compared to recordings from 28 healthy controls. The patients, admitted between September 2011 and April 2012, were separated into 2 groups: 25 with motor retardation and 27 without motor retardation. Twenty-eight healthy controls were also included. Twenty-four-hour recordings, 9-hour daytime sequences, and 64-minute periods of continuous motor activity in the morning and evening were analyzed for mean activity, variability, and complexity. RESULTS Patients with motor retardation had a reduced mean activity level (P = .04) and higher intraindividual variability, as shown by increased standard deviation (SD) (P = .003) and root mean square successive difference (RMSSD) (P = .025), during 24 hours compared to the patients without motor retardation. Both patient groups demonstrated significantly lower mean activity compared to healthy controls (P < .001) as well as higher SD (P < .02) and RMSSD (P < .001) and a higher RMSSD/SD ratio (P = .04). In the active morning period, the patients without motor retardation displayed significantly increased complexity compared to motor-retarded patients (P = .006). CONCLUSIONS The patients with and without motor retardation differ in activity patterns. Findings in depressed inpatients without motor retardation closely resemble those of inpatients with mania.
The Journal of Clinical Psychiatry | 2016
Karoline Krane-Gartiser; Arne E. Vaaler; Ole Bernt Fasmer; Gunnar Morken
Figure 1. Log-Log Plot of Cumulative Probability (P) vs Duration of Active Periods Table 1. Actigraphic Recordings of Motor Activitya MotorRetarded Group (n = 22) Non–MotorRetarded Group (n = 21) t Test (P value) Age, y 43 ± 15 40 ± 14 .481 Gender, n (%) female 15 (68) 10 (48) .172b Duration of recording (min) 1,437 ± 4 1,425 ± 32 .103 Missing data (off-wrist), % 0.23 0.24 .946 Weekday recordings (Monday–Friday) n = 21 n = 17 .138b
Journal of Affective Disorders | 2016
Karoline Krane-Gartiser; Mette Kvisten Steinan; Knut Langsrud; Vegard Vestvik; Trond Sand; Ole Bernt Fasmer; Håvard Kallestad; Gunnar Morken
BACKGROUND The aims of this observational study of patients with euthymic bipolar disorder and sleep disturbance were to 1) compare characteristics related to mood and sleep between two groups with stable and unstable rest-activity cycles and 2) detect between-group differences in motor activity patterns. METHODS 43 patients wore an actigraph for 6-8 days while reporting daily mood and sleep. Patients were defined as having an unstable rest-activity cycle if their diurnal active period duration presented variation above 2h from the mean during one week: 22 patients had stable and 21 unstable rest-activity cycles. Mood variability was defined as at least moderate symptoms and a change across two levels on a 7-point mood scale during one week. RESULTS Patients with unstable rest-activity cycles were younger (37 vs. 48 years, p=0.01) and displayed more mood variability (p=0.02). Ten of 11 patients diagnosed with delayed sleep phase disorder were in the unstable group (p<0.01), and the unstable group had later and more variable get-up-times and bedtimes. In actigraphy recordings, the mean activity counts per minute did not differ between groups, but the minute-to-minute variability was elevated (p=0.04) and increased relative to the overall variability (p=0.03). LIMITATIONS A relatively small study sample and a 1-week study period prevent exploration of long-term clinical implications of results. CONCLUSIONS A subgroup of euthymic patients with bipolar disorder displayed unstable rest-activity cycles combined with mood variability and motor activity patterns that resemble findings in affective episodes.
Psychiatry Research-neuroimaging | 2018
Karoline Krane-Gartiser; Tone Eg Henriksen; Gunnar Morken; Arne E. Vaaler; Ole Bernt Fasmer
The purpose of this study was to compare 24-h motor activity patterns between and within three groups of acutely admitted inpatients with schizophrenia and psychotic disorders (n = 28), bipolar mania (n = 18) and motor-retarded unipolar depression (n = 25) and one group of non-hospitalized healthy individuals (n = 28). Motor activity was measured by wrist actigraphy, and analytical approaches using linear and non-linear variability and irregularity measures were undertaken. In between-group comparisons, the schizophrenia group showed more irregular activity patterns than depression cases and healthy individuals. The schizophrenia and mania cases were clinically similar with respect to high prevalence of psychotic symptoms. Although they could not be separated by a formal statistical test, the schizophrenia cases showed more normal amplitudes in morning to evening mean activity and activity variability. Schizophrenia constituted an independent entity in terms of motor activation that could be distinguished from the other diagnostic groups of psychotic and non-psychotic affective disorders. Despite limitations such as small subgroups, short recordings and confounding effects of medication/hospitalization, these results suggest that detailed temporal analysis of motor activity patterns can identify similarities and differences between prevalent functional psychiatric disorders. For this purpose, irregularity measures seem particularly useful to characterize psychotic symptoms and should be explored in larger samples with longer-term recordings, while searching for underlying mechanisms of motor activity disturbances.
International Journal of Bipolar Disorders | 2017
J. Scott; Arne E. Vaaler; Ole Bernt Fasmer; Gunnar Morken; Karoline Krane-Gartiser
Current Psychiatry Reviews | 2015
Mette Kvisten Steinan; Karoline Krane-Gartiser; Gunnar Morken; J. Scott
BMC Psychiatry | 2017
Karoline Krane-Gartiser; Arne E. Vaaler; Ole Bernt Fasmer; Kjetil Sørensen; Gunnar Morken; J. Scott