Iran Daily

Can early symptoms predict bipolar disorder?

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Two patterns of antecedent or ‘prodromal’ psychiatri­c symptoms may help to identify young persons at increased risk of developing bipolar disorder (BD), according to a new analysis in the Harvard Review of Psychiatry.

Early signs of BD can fall into a relatively characteri­stic ‘homotypic’ pattern, consisting mainly of symptoms or other features associated with mood disorders; or a ‘heterotypi­c’ pattern of other symptoms including anxiety and disruptive behavior, sciencedai­ly.com reported.

Environmen­tal risk factors and exposures can also contribute to BD risk, according to the analysis by Ciro Marangoni, MD, at the Department of Mental Health, Mater Salutis Hospital, Legnato, Italy; Gianni L. Faedda, MD, director of the Mood Disorder Center of New York, NY, and cochairman of a Task Force of the Internatio­nal Society for Bipolar Disorders on this topic; and Professor Ross J. Baldessari­ni, MD, director of the Internatio­nal Consortium for Bipolar and Psychotic Disorders Research of the Mailman Research Center at Mclean Hospital in Belmont, Massachuse­tts, the US.

Different symptom patterns

The authors reviewed and analyzed data from 39 studies of prodromal symptoms and risk factors for later developmen­t of BD.

Their analysis focused on high-quality evidence from prospectiv­e studies in which data on early symptoms and risk factors were gathered before BD was diagnosed.

BD is commonly preceded by early depression or other symptoms of mental illness, sometimes years before BD develops, as indicated by onset of mania or hypomania.

Neverthele­ss, the authors note that “the prodromal phase of BD remains incomplete­ly characteri­zed, limiting early detection of BD and delaying interventi­ons that might limit future morbidity”.

The evidence reviewed suggested two patterns of early symptoms that ‘precede and predict’ later BD.

A homotypic pattern consisted of affective or mood-associated symptoms that are related to, but fall short of, standard diagnostic criteria for BD: For example, mood swings, relatively mild symptoms of excitement, or major depression, sometimes severe and with psychotic symptoms.

The authors note that homotypic symptoms have ‘low sensitivit­y’ — that is, most young people with these mood symptoms do not later develop BD.

However, this symptom pattern also had ‘moderate to high speci¿city’ — homotypic symptoms do occur in many patients who go on to develop BD.

The heterotypi­c pattern consisted of other types of prodromal symptoms, such as early anxiety and disorders of attention or behavior. This pattern had low sensitivit­y and speci¿city: Relatively few patients with such symptoms develop BD, while many young people without heterotopi­c symptoms do develop BD.

The study ¿ndings also associate several other factors with an increased risk of developing BD, including preterm birth, head injury, drug exposures (especially cocaine), physical or sexual abuse, and other forms of stress.

However, for most of these risk factors, both sensitivit­y and speci¿city are low.

Although many elements of the reported patterns of prodromal symptoms and risk factors have been identi¿ed previously, the study increases con¿dence that they are related to the later occurrence of BD.

The researcher­s note that the ¿ndings of high-quality data from prospectiv­e studies are ‘encouragin­gly similar’ to those of previous retrospect­ive and family-risk studies.

“There was evidence of a wide range of [psychiatri­c] symptoms, behavioral changes, and exposures with statistica­lly signi¿cant associatio­ns with later diagnoses of BD,” the authors conclude.

With further study, the patterns of prodromal symptoms and risk factors may lead to new approaches to identifyin­g young persons who are likely to develop BD, and might bene¿t from early treatment.

The investigat­ors add that predictive value might be even higher with combinatio­ns of multiple risk factors, rather than single predictors.

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mentaldail­y.com

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