BIPOLAR Flashcards

1
Q

What is the recurrence rate of bipolar? What about in the first year?

A

90% First year = 50%

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2
Q

What are the 4 subtypes of bipolar disorder?

A

Mixed mania; Rapid cycling; bipolar II; and Secondary mania

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3
Q

What is mixed mania?

A

Simultaneous mania & depression

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4
Q

What is rapid cycling?

A

more than 4 episodes/year

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5
Q

What is bipolar II?

A

Hypomanis (LESS than 4 days duration; who is functional and extra-alert) that alternates with depression. Never had mania.

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6
Q

What is secondary mania?

A

Due to an underlying disorder (drugs [steroids], tumor, CVA, SLE, infectious)

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7
Q

Is there a genetic component to bipolar disorder?

A

Yes (more common in twins)

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8
Q

What are the 2 ways you can figure out if there is a genetic component?

A

Linkage studies (find the gene within the disorder) & Association studies (compare variations in genes); possibly mitochondria dysfunction

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9
Q

In general, at what age are people diagnosed with bipolar disorder?

A

Adolescence 13-18 years old (followed closely by early adulthood)

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10
Q

What portion of the brain does bipolar mostly affect?

A

Anterior Limbic System (prefrontal cortex, amygdala, hippocampus)

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11
Q

On average, a person with bipolar disorder is not diagnosed until when?

A

Nearly a decade after the onset of symptoms

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12
Q

What are some of the diagnostic challenges of bipolar?

A

past records (poor prior history); vague diagnostic criteria; lack of validating biological markers; and depression is a common chief complaint during manic episodes

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13
Q

What are the 3 phases of treating bipolar?

A

Acute; continuation; and maintenance/discontinuation

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14
Q

What’s a difference between schizophrenia & bipolar?

A

Bipolar is highly functioning

Schizophrenia often declines over time

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15
Q

How much of a person’s like with bipolar disorder is spent in the manic stage?

A

half of their life

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16
Q

What is a manic episode?

A

Sleeplessness; look agitates, euphoric, or irritable; buying bulk of things that they don’t need or can’t explain why they have them (can even spend all the money they have – which is where the risk for recurrence)

17
Q

What is bipolar I?

A

They have one manic episode (also why it’s hard to treat; if someone has a manic episode at 20 they often forget when they are 50 what it was like and therefore they might not want to treat)

18
Q

How do you treat acute mania?

A

Lithium or valproate or antipsychotic (go with the lithium unless they also have psychosis)

Remember tardive dyskinesia are permanent

19
Q

How do you treat a bipolar patient with depression?

A

Lithium (can add an antidepressant)

20
Q

What is the maintenance treatment for bipolar?

A

Lithium or valproate

Alternatives: lamotrigine, carbamazepine, oxycarbazepine

Atypical antipsychotics can be considered

21
Q

How long does lithium take to get to full effect?

A

14 days; which you may need to use a benzo in the mean time

22
Q

What is an advantage to lithium?

A

It decreases suicide rate

23
Q

How do you evaluate mania?

A

Elevated mood, increased motor activity, irritability, speech, content, disruptive/aggressive behavior

24
Q

What 3 mood stabilizers, used to treat bipolar, are FDA approved?

A

Lithium, Depakote, and Lamictal

25
Q

Any treatment for depressant carries the risk of what in a bipolar patient?

A

Causing mania

26
Q

What type of antidepressant will increase the risk of a mania episode?

A

Tricyclic antidepressants