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Wiley InterScience | |||||||||||||||||||
![]() Bipolar DisordersVolume 7 Issue s4, Pages 4 - 12 Published Online: 10 Jun 2005 Journal compilation © 2010 John Wiley & Sons A/S The Official Journal of The International Society for Bipolar Disorders
Abstract | References | Full Text: HTML, PDF (Size: 298K) | Related Articles | Citation Tracking Review Article The mood spectrum: improving the diagnosis of bipolar disorder Copyright 2005 Blackwell Munksgaard KEYWORDS bipolar disorder • bipolar spectrum • depression • diagnostic criteria • hypomania • structured clinical interview Angst J, Cassano G. The mood spectrum: improving the diagnosis of bipolar disorder.
Bipolar Disord 2005: 7 (Suppl. 4): 4–12. © Blackwell Munksgaard, 2005 ABSTRACTAlthough the distinction between bipolar and unipolar disorders served our field well in the early days of psychopharmacology, in clinical practice it is apparent that their phenotypes are only partially described by current diagnostic classification systems. A substantial body of evidence has accrued suggesting that clinical variability needs to be viewed in terms of a broad conceptualization of mood disorders and their common threshold or subthreshold comorbidity. The spectrum model provides a useful dimensional approach to psychopathology and is based on the assumption that early-onset and enduring symptoms shape the adult personality and establish a vulnerability to the subsequent development of Axis-I disorders. To obtain a clearer understanding of the depressive phenotype, it is pivotal that we increase our detection of hypomanic symptoms so that clinicians can better distinguish bipolar II disorder from unipolar depression. Diagnostic criteria sensitive to hypomanic symptoms have been identified that suggest bipolar II disorder is at least as prevalent as major depression. Moreover, the comorbidities of these illnesses are very different and alcoholism in particular appears to be a greater problem in bipolar II disorder than in unipolar depression. Structured clinical interviews and patient self-report questionnaires have also successfully identified the presence of hypomanic symptoms in patients with unipolar disorder and support the concept of a spectrum of bipolar illness. In conclusion, the importance of subthreshold syndromes should not be underestimated as failure to recognize bipolar spectrum disorder could delay treatment and worsen prognosis. |
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![]() | Personality and Mental Health |
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