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BIPOLAR DISORDER N.İREM ABDULHAYOĞLU • Bipolar disorder, bipolar affective disorder, or manic-depressive illness (MDI), is a common, severe, and persistent mental illness. • Mental health condition that causes extreme mood swings that include emotional highs (mania or hypomania) and lows (depression). Epidemiology • The estimated lifetime prevalence of bipolar disorder among adults worldwide is 1 to 3 percent. • The mean age of onset for bipolar I disorder is 18 years and for bipolar II disorder 20 years . • The ratio of men to women who develop bipolar disorder is approximately 1:1 . • WHO estimated that bipolar disorder was the 46th greatest cause of disability and mortality in the world, which placed bipolar disorder ahead of breast cancer as well as Alzheimer’s disease. • Many bipolar patients never receive treatment . Etiology • The pathogenesis of bipolar disorder is not known. • The etiology may involve biologic, psychologic, and social factors. Genetics: First-degree relatives of people with BPI are approximately 7 times more likely to develop BPI than the general population. The lifetime risk of bipolar disorder for a monozygotic co-twin is 40 to 70 percent. With the involvement of the ANK3,CACNA1C, and CLOCK genes. Neurophysiologic factors: • Decreased activation and diminution of gray matter in a cortical-cognitive brain network, which has been associated with the regulation of emotions in patients with bipolar disorder. • An increased activation in ventral limbic brain regions that mediate the experience of emotions and generation of emotional responses was also discovered. Psychosocial factors: • Advancing paternal age, which is associated with increased genetic mutations during spermatogenesis, can increase the risk of bipolar disorder in one’s offspring. • Stressful life events such as childhood maltreatment may be associated with onset of bipolar disorder and a more severe course of illness. Pregnancy is a particular stress for women with a manic-depressive illness history. Biochemical factors: People with unipolar depression, antidepressant treatment is associated with an increased risk of subsequent mania/bipolar disorder. • Increase in epinephrine and norepinephrine causes mania and a decrease in epinephrine and norepinephrine causes depression. • Drugs used to treat depression and drugs of abuse (e.g. cocaine) that increase levels of monoamines, including serotonin, norepinephrine, or dopamine, can all potentially trigger mania. Types • • • • • Bipolar I disorder Bipolar II disorder Cyclothymic disorder Mixed features Rapid-cycling Clinical Presentation • Mania, hypomania, major depression or mixed features • The severity of these syndromes varies widely across patients • Some symptomatic patients remit and become euthymic, while other patients transition immediately from one type of syndrome to another (eg, from major depression to mania) without an intervening period of euthymia • The mood episode at onset of bipolar disorder is usually major depression. • Prodromal signs and symptoms such as irritability, anxiety, mood lability (“mood swings”), agitation, aggressiveness, sleep disturbance, and hyperactivity may precede onset of diagnosable bipolar disorder. Mania • Manic episodes involve clinically significant changes in mood, behavior, energy, sleep, and cognition. • Abnormally elevated, irritable, and labile mood is a core symptom required to diagnose mania. • Mood: Unusually good, euphoric, or high mood, which may be accompanied by disinhibition (eg, wearing garish clothes or disrobing in public), disregard for social boundaries, expansiveness, and social activities (eg, acting flirtatious, renewing old friendships, or lengthy telephone calls with strangers). Mood often varies during the day. • Behaviour: Persistently increased energy and goal-directed activity. Increased planning and activity is typically marked by impulsivity, poor judgement, and disregard for risks. Examples include taking on new and foolish business ventures, unaffordable spending sprees, numerous sexual encounters with strangers, and driving recklessly. In addition, patients are often unable to complete the many tasks or projects that are started. • Sleep: Decreased need for sleep. Manic patients may feel well-rested after a few hours of sleep, or feel energetic despite not sleeping for days. • Appetite is increased. • Libido: Sexual activity is often increased. • Speech: Generally loud, pressured or accelerated, and difficult to interrupt. • Thinking: Patients generally have an exaggerated sense of wellbeing and self-confidence, which may extend to grandiosity of psychotic proportions .As an example, some patients believe they have a special relationship with God or celebrities. • Cognition: Increased mental activity, racing thoughts, distractibility, and difficulty distinguishing between relevant and irrelevant thoughts; these symptoms result in flight of ideas. Patients may not recall events that occur during manic episodes. • Hallucinations: also occur in severe cases. • Insight: is invariably impaired.They seldom think themselves ill or in need of treatment. As a result, psychosocial functioning is markedly impaired, and hospitalization is often required to protect manic patients and prevent behavior leading to painful consequences (eg, financial ruin, job loss, divorce, and assaulting others) Hypomania Hypomanic episodes are characterized by an elevated, expansive, or irritable mood of at least 4 consecutive days duration. • Self-esteem may be inflated during hypomania, but never reaches the point of delusional grandiosity that can occur during mania. • Although mental overactivity and flight of ideas can occur in either hypomania or mania, thought form is more organized in hypomania. • Hypomanic speech can be loud and rapid, but typically is easier to interrupt than manic speech. • By definition, hypomania never necessitates hospitalization; by contrast, mania frequently does. Major depression • Generally characterized by dysphoria, as well as slowing in the pace of mental and physical activity (eg, speech is slow and soft) • Interest in pleasurable activities (eg, sex) is minimal, energy is low, and memory and concentration are impaired. • Appetite is typically diminished and accompanied by weight loss. • Sleep disturbances (insomnia or hypersomnia) • Feelings of worthlessness and excessive guilt and suicidal thoughts and behavior. • Poor eye contact, poor hygiene • Feelings of hopelessness and helplessness • Somatic symptoms (eg, pain), and impaired psychosocial functioning Bipolar I • %0.4-1.6, equal prevelance among sexes • In men, manic episodes are seen more • In women, depressive episodes and rapid cycling are seen more • Recurrent • For diagnosis: At least 1 manic episode lasting for 1 week Bipolar II • 0.5%, may be more common in women than men • Men have more hypomanic episodes than depressive episodes • Interval between episodes decrease with age • For diagnosis: Presence of one or more depressive episodes Presence of at least one hypomanic episode Mixed episode: Occasionally, manic and depressive symptoms occur together, as a mixed mood state. For example, an overactive and overtalkative patient may have profound depressive thoughts including suicidal ideas. Rapid-cycling: Having four or more mood episodes within a 12-month period. Women appear more likely than men to have rapid cycling. A rapid-cycling pattern increases risk for severe depression and suicide attempts. Antidepressants may sometimes be associated with triggering or prolonging periods of rapid cycling. Cyclothymic disorder: milder form of bipolar disorder Episodes of hypomania and mild depression for 2 years. Diagnosis • Often very complicated; it mimics many other disorders and has comorbidity • Careful history and examination • It is important to first rule out the possibility of any other organic diagnosis: Epilepsy Thyroid disorder Multiple sclerosis Medications(eg, antidepressants can propel a patient into mania; other medications may include baclofen, bromide, bromocriptine, captopril, cimetidine, corticosteroids, cyclosporine, disulfiram, hydralazine, isoniazid, levodopa, methylphenidate, metrizamide, procarbazine, procyclidine) AIDS Differential Diagnosis • • • • • • • • • Major Depressive Disorder Schizophrenia Anxiety Disorders Abuse of stimulant drugs Posttraumatic Stress Disorder Multiple Sclerosis Neurosyphilis Dementia Endocrine Disorders Comorbidity Most bipolar patients have at least one comorbid psychiatric or general medical illness.Patients with comorbidity have a worse course of illness. • Anxiety disorders • Substance use disorders • Attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) • Eating disorders • Intermittent explosive disorder • Personality disorders Prognosis • Significant morbidity and mortality rates. • Approximately 25-50% of individuals with bipolar disorder attempt suicide, and 11% successfully commit suicide. • Factors suggesting a worse prognosis include the following: Poor job history Substance abuse Psychotic features Depressive features between periods of mania and depression Male sex • Factors suggesting a better prognosis include the following: Length of manic phases (short duration) Late age of onset Treatment of Bipolar disorder • The treatment of bipolar affective disorder is directly related to the phase of the episode (ie, depression or mania) and the severity of that phase, and it may involve a combination of psychotherapy and medication. • Acute care and crisis stabilization for psychosis ,suicidal or homicidal ideas or other unstable or dangerous conditions. • Movement toward full recovery from a depressed or manic state • Attainment and maintenance of euthymia Pharmacotherapy • Anxiolytics, Benzodiazepines ( lorazepam, clonazepam) • Mood stabilizers (lithium carbonate;first-line agent for longterm prophylaxis) • Anticonvulsants: effective in preventing mood swings (carbamazepine, valproate sodium,valproic acid, divalproex sodium, lamotrigine, topiramate) • Antipsychotics, 2nd Generation or atypical:treatment of both acute mania and mood stabilization (asenapine, ziprasidone, quetiapine, risperidone, aripiprazole, olanzapine, olanzapine and fluoxetine, clozapine, paliperidone) • Antipsychotics, 1st Generation (inhaled loxapine, haloperidol) • Phenothiazine antipsychotics (chlorpromazine) • Dopamine agonists (pramipexole) • Antidepressant therapy Non Pharmacological Therapy • Psychotherapy:may help to decrease relapse rates, improve quality of life, and/or increase functioning, or more favourable symptom improvement. • Electroconvulsive therapy (ECT): useful in a number of patients with bipolar affective disorder,such as the following; When rapid, definitive medical/psychiatric treatment is needed When the risks of ECT are less than that of other treatments When the bipolar disorder is refractory to an adequate trial with other treatment strategies When the patient prefers this treatment modality • proven to be highly effective in the treatment of acute mania Indications for Inpatient Management • • • • • • Danger to self Danger to others Delirium Marked psychotic symptoms Total inability to function Total loss of control (excessive spending, undertaking a dangerous trip) • Medical conditions that warrant medication monitoring (substance withdrawal/intoxication) Dietary and Activity Measures • Patients should be advised not to make significant changes in their salt intake, because increased salt intake may lead to reduced serum lithium levels and reduced intake may lead to increased levels and toxicity. • Patients in the depressed phase are encouraged to exercise. • These individuals should try to develop a regular daily schedule of major activities, especially times of going to bed and waking up. • Both the exercise and the regular schedule are keys to surviving this illness. Prevention and Long-Term Monitoring • Prevention is the key to the long-term treatment; First, use medications such as lithium serve as mood stabilizers Second, psycho education is instituted for the patient and the patient’s family; it is critical that the patient and the patient’s family understand and recognize the importance of medication compliance and the early signs of mania and depression THANK YOU.. References • https://www.uptodate.com.lproxy.yeditepe.edu.tr/contents/bi polar-disorder-in-adults-epidemiology-andpathogenesis?source=search_result&search=bipolar&selected Title=6~150#H1 • https://www.uptodate.com.lproxy.yeditepe.edu.tr/contents/bi polar-disorder-in-adults-clinical-features?source=see_link • https://www.uptodate.com.lproxy.yeditepe.edu.tr/contents/bi polar-disorder-in-adults-pharmacotherapy-for-acute-maniaand-hypomania?source=see_link • http://emedicine.medscape.com/article/286342-treatment • Kaplan and Sadock's Comprehensive Textbook of Psychiatry