Depression Preceding Diagnosis of Bipolar Disorder.
Claire O'Donovan,Martin Alda +1 more
TL;DR: Depression that precedes an onset of manifest bipolar disorder as early stage bipolar disorder is focused on and pragmatic management strategies beyond clinical guidelines that can be considered for this at-risk group encompassing the more recent child and adolescent literature are reviewed.
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Abstract: This paper focuses on depression that precedes an onset of manifest bipolar disorder as early stage bipolar disorder. First, we review how to pragmatically identify the clinical characteristics of patients presenting with an episode of depression who subsequently go on to develop episodes of mania or hypomania. The existing literature shows a strong consensus: accurate identification of depression with early onset and recurrent course with multiple episodes, subthreshold hypomanic and/or mixed symptoms, and family history of bipolar disorder or completed suicide have been shown by multiple authors as signs pointing to bipolar diagnosis. This contrasts with relatively limited information available to guide management of such "pre-bipolar" (pre-declared bipolar) patients, especially those in the adult age range. Default assumption of unipolar depression at this stage carries significant risk. Antidepressants are still the most common pharmacological treatment used, but clinicians need to be aware of their potential harm. In some patients with unrecognized bipolar depression, antidepressants can not only produce switch to (hypo)mania, but also mixed symptoms, or worsening of depression with an increased risk of suicide. We review pragmatic management strategies in the literature beyond clinical guidelines that can be considered for this at-risk group encompassing the more recent child and adolescent literature. In the future, genetic research could make the early identification of bipolar depression easier by generating informative markers and polygenic risk scores.
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Citations
Management of Depression in Adults
TL;DR: Management of depression in adults involves addressing the underlying causes, providing therapy, medication, or a combination of both, and monitoring progress.
32
Clinical and demographic factors associated with delayed diagnosis of bipolar disorder: Data from Health Outcomes and Patient Evaluations in Bipolar Disorder (HOPE-BD) study.
Kamyar Keramatian,Jairo V Pinto,Ayal Schaffer,Verinder Sharma,Serge Beaulieu,Sagar V. Parikh,Lakshmi N. Yatham +6 more
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors examined the clinical and demographic factors associated with delayed diagnosis of Bipolar Disorder, defined as the difference between the age at first mood episode (depressive, manic, or hypomanic) and age at the correct diagnosis of BD, using data from a Canadian multicentre naturalistic study.
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Reduced heart rate variability is associated with higher illness burden in bipolar disorder.
Abigail Ortiz,Abigail Ortiz,Kamil Bradler,Pooja Moorti,Stephane MacLean,M. Ishrat Husain,Marcos Sanches,Benjamin I. Goldstein,Martin Alda,Benoit H. Mulsant +9 more
TL;DR: In this paper, the association between heart rate variability (HRV) and illness burden in patients with bipolar disorder was investigated. But none of the studies analyzed the association of HRV with illness burden.
26
Diagnosis and management of depression in adolescents
TL;DR: In this article , the diagnosis and management of depression in adolescents is reviewed, drawing on available evidence and recommendations from international guidelines, as outlined in Box 1 and Box 2, respectively.
Efficacy of cariprazine in bipolar I depression across patient characteristics: a post hoc analysis of pooled randomized, placebo-controlled studies.
TL;DR: Cariprazine 1.5–3 mg/d consistently improved depressive symptoms in all patient subgroups without regard to differences in baseline demographic and clinical characteristics, suggesting broad efficacy across a spectrum of patients with bipolar I depression.
17
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