(Karolinska Institutet) A new study from Sweden's Karolinska Institutet suggests that bipolar disorder -- or manic-depressive disorder -- does not increase the risk of committing violent crime. Instead, the over-representation of individuals with bipolar disorder in violent crime statistics is almost entirely attributable to concurrent substance abuse.
Read »Navigation
User login
Visit the BiotechMashup Blog
Best upcoming scoops - Chemistry
- Brooks Life Science Systems and the Scripps Research Institute initiate partnership
- EPA and DoD sign memorandum of understanding to make military bases more sustainable
- Unusual 'collapsing' iron superconductor sets record for its class
- Spotlight on a stellar nursery
- BioResearch Open Access launching in March 2012 from Mary Ann Liebert, Inc., publishers