Title of article :
Distinguishing bipolar and unipolar disorders: An isomer model
Author/Authors :
Parker، نويسنده , , Gordon and Hadzi-Pavlovic، نويسنده , , Dusan and Tully، نويسنده , , Lucy، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2006
Abstract :
Background
ision between unipolar and bipolar disorders can be problematic, we sought to develop a self-report questionnaire of mood ‘highs’ that would both distinguish true Bipolar Disorder from any elevated mood states in unipolar depression and sharpen the distinction between Bipolar I and II conditions.
tem questionnaire was developed and completed by 157 out-patients presenting with a major depressive episode, and clinically diagnosed as having either Bipolar I (BP-I), Bipolar II (BP-II) or Unipolar (UP) depression, although DSM-IV duration criteria for BP-I and BP-II were not imposed.
s
analyses identified four key constructs to mood ‘highs’, while additional analyses refined the questionnaire to 27 items. The refined measure was highly accurate in distinguishing composite Bipolar (BP-I and BP-II) from UP subjects (AUC = 0.93, sensitivity = 81%; specificity = 98%, positive predictive value = 0.95). Questionnaire scores were similar for BP-I and BP-II subjects, raising the possibility that the core mood state differs little in severity across the two expressions, and that their distinction allows an alternative model that weights the presence or absence of psychotic features.
sions
udy advances understanding of boundary distinctions between bipolar and unipolar mood disorders, and between BP-I and BP-II conditions, and allows consideration of a model distinguishing BP-I from BP-II by the presence of psychotic features only. The described model is the mirror image of a hierarchical structural model for conceptualizing psychotic and melancholic depression, allowing an ‘isomer model’ for linking the mood swing states.
Keywords :
Bipolar II , Bipolar I , MANIA , Hypomania
Journal title :
Journal of Affective Disorders
Journal title :
Journal of Affective Disorders