Title of article :
Biphasic course in bipolar II outpatients: Prevalence and clinical correlates of a cyclic pattern described by Baillarger and Falret in hospitalised patients in 1854
Author/Authors :
Benazzi، نويسنده , , Franco and Akiskal، نويسنده , , Hagop S.، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2006
Pages :
5
From page :
183
To page :
187
Abstract :
Background ic course refers to a mood episode immediately followed by one of opposite polarity and then usually by a free interval. It was described under the rubric of folie à double forme among psychiatric inpatients by the French psychiatrist Baillarger 150 years ago. A rapid cycling form (folie circulaire) was also described in the same year by his compatriot Falret. These patients would probably have today met the criteria for bipolar I. Our aim was to find the prevalence and clinical correlates of biphasic course in bipolar II (BP II) in contemporary ambulatory patients. s utive 206 BP II outpatients were interviewed in the first authorʹs private practice, using a modified Structured Clinical Interview for DSM-IV. To assign a patient to biphasic episode, it must have occurred at least once when not on an antidepressant. s ncy of biphasic course was 80%. Biphasic vs. non-biphasic course was significantly higher in polyepisodic major depressive episode (MDE) and those with antidepressant-associated hypomania; the same was true for index melancholic subtype, where index of Global Assessment of Functioning scale (GAF) score was lower. Female gender, age at onset, mixed depressive episodes and bipolar family history were not significantly different between the two groups. tions ts were not observed on a prospective basis. We cannot report on the relative proportion of MDE preceded vs. followed by hypomania, because such distinction was not part of FBʹs naturalistic database. sions ngly in line with Baillargerʹs observation 150 years ago, biphasic course represented the typical pattern in this outpatient private practice sample of BP II. That antidepressant-associated hypomania was significantly more common in the biphasic course variety suggests that when MDE preceded hypomania—in such patients, antidepressants might have simply accentuated the natural cycle rather than causing it. Switching in the clinical setting then seems to depend on a biphasic cyclic baseline aggravated by antidepressant use. The fact that mixed states were equally prevalent in both course patterns suggests that the mechanisms involved in switching and mixity may be distinct. The significantly higher number of melancholic episodes with lower GAF scores indicates that—in line with Falretʹs description—overall, the biphasic course represents a relatively unfavorable outcome pattern.
Keywords :
Biphasic , Bipolar II , Baillarger and Falret
Journal title :
Journal of Affective Disorders
Serial Year :
2006
Journal title :
Journal of Affective Disorders
Record number :
1431532
Link To Document :
بازگشت