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Wiley InterScience

Psychiatry and Clinical Neurosciences

Psychiatry and Clinical Neurosciences

Volume 59 Issue 5, Pages 570 - 575

Published Online: 30 Sep 2005

Journal compilation © 2010 Japanese Society of Psychiatry and Neurology



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Regular Article
Unipolar depression with racing thoughts: A bipolar spectrum disorder?
FRANCO BENAZZI, md , phd 1,2,3,4
  1 University of California at San Diego, USA ;   2 Hecker Psychiatry Research Center, Ravenna, Italy ,   3 Department of Psychiatry University of Szeged, Szeged, Hungary , and   4 Department of Psychiatry, National Health Service, Forli, Italy
Correspondence to  Dr Franco Benazzi, Via Pozzetto 17, 48010 Castiglione di Cervia RA, Italy. Email: FrancoBenazzi@FBenazzi.it or f.benazzi@fo.nettuno.it
Copyright 2005 Blackwell Science Pty Ltd
KEYWORDS
bipolar II disorder • depression • depressive mixed state • major depressive disorder • racing thoughts

ABSTRACT

Abstract  Major depressive disorder (MDD) with racing/crowded thoughts is understudied. Kraepelin classified 'depression with flight of ideas' in the mixed states of his manic-depressive insanity. The aim of the study was to test whether MDD with racing/crowded thoughts was close to bipolar disorders. Consecutive 379 bipolar-II disorder (BP-II) and 271 MDD depressed outpatients were interviewed using the Structured Clinical Interview for DSM-IV, the Hypomania Interview Guide, and the Family History Screen, by a senior psychiatrist in a private practice. Intra-depression hypomanic symptoms were systematically assessed. Mixed depression was defined as a major depressive episode (MDE) plus three or more intra-MDE hypomanic symptoms. MDD with racing/crowded thoughts was compared to MDD without racing/crowded thoughts on classic bipolar validators (young onset age, many recurrences, atypical and mixed depression, bipolar family history). Frequency of MDD with racing/crowded thoughts was 56.4%. MDD with racing/crowded thoughts, versus MDD without racing/crowded thoughts, had significantly lower age at onset, more MDE severity, more psychotic, melancholic, atypical, and mixed depressions, and more bipolar family history. Of the intra-MDE hypomanic symptoms, irritability, psychomotor agitation and distractibility were significantly more common in MDD with racing/crowded thoughts. Compared to BP-II on bipolar validators, validators were less common in MDD with racing/crowded thoughts. MDD with racing/crowded thoughts seemed to be a severe variant of MDD. MDD with racing/crowded thoughts versus MDD without racing/crowded thoughts, and versus BP-II, had significant differences on bipolar validators, suggesting that it may lie along a continuum linking MDD without racing/crowded thoughts and BP-II.


Received 4 December 2004; revised 14 February 2005; accepted 3 April 2005.

DIGITAL OBJECT IDENTIFIER (DOI)
10.1111/j.1440-1819.2005.01416.x About DOI

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