Lecture 12 - Bipolar Disorder Flashcards

1
Q

Illness cost of Bipolar Disorder

A
  • 6th leading cause of disability worldwide

- other impairments: marital disputes, substance abuse, suicide, erratic work history…

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2
Q

Main idea:

A
  • affective disorder

- Episodes of mania (or hypomania), depression or mixed mood

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3
Q

Manic episode - diagnostic criteria

A
  • at least 3 symptoms present most of the day, during the same 1 week period.
    1) irritability
    2) grandiosity
    3) distractibility
    4) less need for sleep
    5) pressure of speech
    6) more activity
    7) impulsivity
    8) flight of ideas
  • Impairment of social, occupation…
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4
Q

Hypomanic episode

A
  • manic symptoms BUT
  • lasts 4 days consecutive
  • less impairing
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5
Q

Depressive Episode

A
  • at least 5 symptoms pressent most of day, during the same 2 week period
    1) depressed
    2) anhedonia
    3) change in weight
    4) change in sleep
    5) psychomotor agitation
    6) fatigue
    7) feeling of worthlessness/excessive guilt
    8) diminished concentration
    9) suicide ideation/attempt
  • impairment
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6
Q

Mixed episode

A
  • manic and depressive symptoms
  • dysphoric mania, or agitated depression
  • frustrating, confusing, most debilitating
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7
Q

Bipolar Types

A

BD I: severe, more than 1 manic episode lasting more than 1 week

BD II: lifetime hypomanic episode, at least one depressive episode

Cyclothymia: more than 2 years of alternations b/w hypomanic and depressive

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8
Q

Bipolar spectrum disorder idea

A
  • patients converting from cyclothymia to BD II, from BD II to BD I
    (see slide 6 from Bipolar lecture)
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9
Q

Recurrence (bipolar)

A
  • over 1 year: 47%
  • over 2 years: 60%
  • over 5 years: 73%
  • over 20 years: 74%
  • depressive symptoms last longer than manic
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10
Q

Epidemiology

A
  • lifetime prevalence: 1% (not sex - specific)
  • onset: 17-30 years; when depression comes first often misdiagnosed for unipolar depression
  • High risk of comorbidity ADHD, ODD, anxiety disorders, substance abuse..
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11
Q

Etiology

A

Heritability: ~80%

- BUT environment plays a role

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12
Q

Trajectory

A
  • high-right individuas tend to present:
  • anxiety & sleep disturbances in childhood
  • adjustment and minor mood disorders during puberty
  • MDD in adolescence
  • BP in early adulthood
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13
Q

Environmental effects

A
  • reward hypersensitivity

- disruption of social/circadian rhythm

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14
Q

Reward Hypersensitivity Model

A
  • Reward system: regulates goal-directed behaviour and approach motivation
  • activated by goal-reward related cues
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15
Q

Social/circadian rhythm disruption model

A
  • circadian rhythm:
  • biological process repeated every 24 hours
  • affected by social rhythm/life
  • 2 main hormones: melatonin (sleep) + cortisol (alterness)
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16
Q

Biological model

A

Altered functioning of neurotransmitters:

  • Dopamine: higher or lower receptor sensitivity - BD related behavioural symptoms (ex: activity, pressured speech)
  • Serotonin: higher/lower receptor sensitivity - cognitive symptoms (ex: worthlessness)
  • nature of dysregulation is unknown**

Altered neural activity

  • frontal limbic circuitry: lower prefrontal and higher amygdala activation in response to emotional content
  • frontal striatal circuitry: higher orbitofrontal and higher striatal activation in response to reward anticipation
  • Inconsistent results on gene polymorphisms**
17
Q

Psychological model

A
  • neuroticism: only depressive symptoms
  • low self-esteem: both depressive and manic symptoms
  • ambitious goal-striving: 1st manic onset
  • evening chronotype BD I patients
18
Q

Social model

A
  • negative life events (ex: definite failure or loss) - BD symptoms
  • low social support: families with negative attitudes (ex: hostility, guilt) have 94% relapse within 1st year (compared to 17% with supportive)

**need studies investigating bio-psycho-social factors combined as predictors of bipolar disorders

19
Q

Screening

A
  • Clinical interviews: MINI-PLUS, SCID, SADS-L

- Questionnaires: Questionnaire for Bipolar Illness, YMRS QIDS, GBI

20
Q

STUDY: longitudinal; examine the influence of emotionality, parental neglect,
exposure to parental BD, and their interplay on the risk for
developing mood disorders

A

Results:

Diagnosis:

  • 44% developed BD
  • Mean age of onset: 18 years

Contribution to risk:

  • Emotionality: risk for BD
  • Parental neglect : risk for BD
  • Exposure to parental BD: risk for BD
  • ↑ Emotionality x ↑ Exposure to parental BD: ↑↑ risk for BD

*Importance of early psychosocial support!