Bipolar Affective Disorder (BPAD) Flashcards

1
Q

ICD10 criteria for a diagnosis of BPAD

A

ICD 10 requires that the patient must experience “at least two episodes one of which must be hypomanic/manic or mixed, with recovery usually complete between the episodes”.

  • Type 1: One or more episodes of full mania +/- an episode of depression
  • Type 2: One or more episodes of hypomania with at least one episode of depression (mainly depressive picture)
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2
Q

Point prevalence of BPAD

A

1.5% in the general population

Prevalence of BPAD on the ward is 2%

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3
Q

Mean age of onset of BPAD and relationship to sex and ethnicity

A
  • Mean age of onset is around 18-21
  • No difference in prevalence between sexes or ethnicities
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4
Q

Chance of developing BPAD if a first degree relatie has the same condition?

A
  • 7x more likely to develop condition than in the general population
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5
Q

What is mania. What are its core symptoms? When can a manic episode be diagnosed

A

Mood must be predominantly elevated, expansive or irritable, and abnormal for the individual concerned. The mood change will be prominent and sustained for at least 1 week (unless they require hospital admission in which case it is automatic)

The core symptoms of mania include elevated mood, energy and enjoyment.

At least three of the following must be seen for diagnosis of a manic episode (must severely interfere with personal functioning):

  • Increased talkativeness/ pressured speech
  • Flight of ideas
  • Increased self-esteem and grandiosity
  • Decreased need for sleep
  • Distractibility
  • Impulsive, reckless behaviour
  • Increased sexual drive, sociability or goal-directed activity
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6
Q

What are some cognitive symptoms of mania

A
  • Inflated self-esteem and confidence
  • Believe they are gifted, attractive, creative, intelligent and extremely special
  • Optimism- ignoring potential pitfalls of their ideas
  • Their thoughts and concentration may feel clearer than ever, however, they are objectively distractable with pressure of speech and flight of ideas
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7
Q

What are some biological symptoms of mania

A
  • Reduced sleep
  • Increased appetite and libido (often sexually disinhibited) though may be ‘too busy to eat’
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8
Q

What are some psychotic features of mania

A

are associated with severe mania and are usually mood congruent:

  • Hallucinations: typically mood-congruent (e.g celebrities congratulating them)
  • Delusions: can be grandiose or persecutory
  • Self-neglectct: preoccupation with their own thoughts and extravagant themes and their distractibility may lead to self-neglect, so patients may not eat or drink which results in poor living conditions.
  • Catatonic behaviour- manic stupor
  • Total loss of insight
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9
Q

How are patients at risk during a manic episode

A

Patients may disinhibited, at risk of impulsive decision making e.g overspending, gambling, reckless driving, drug and alcohol misuse. May be at risk of exploitation or assault. Irritability can lead to verbal or physical aggression, inciting assault. Self-harm and suicide attempts can occur in moments of sudden despair.

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10
Q

What is hypomania and when can it be classified

A

Decreased degree of functional impairment compared to mania, all the same symptoms just to a lesser extent. Must last for longer than 4 days

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11
Q

What are some physical causes of mania (‘secondary mania’)

A
  • Organic brain damage (especially right hemisphere) is more common in the elderly.
  • Medication: Levo-Dopa and corticosteroids are the most common culprits.
  • Illicit drugs: stimulant or other street drugs induced mania if the mood state significantly outlasts the drugged state then a diagnosis of bipolar disorder can be made.
  • Hypothyroidism creates a picture akin to depression; in hyperthyroid state one may present as hypomanic or agitated depressed.
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12
Q

Mania differentials

A
  • Organic causes: delirium, intoxication (amphetamines, cocaine), dementia, frontal lobe damage, cerebral infarction, ‘myxoedema madness.’
  • Schizoaffective disorder: psychotic and affective symptoms evolve simultaneously
  • Emotionally unstable personality disorder: labile mood and impulsivity can mimic mania, but will be persistent traits, not episodic
  • ADHD- but ADHD is more persistent and develop earlier (by the age of 6)
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13
Q

Investigations to consider when you suspect mania

A
  • Collateral Hx
  • Physical Examination
  • Blood tests
    • FBC
    • TFTs
    • CRP + ESR (infection)
  • Urine drug screen (UDS)
  • CT/MRI brain to exclude intracerebral causes (if indicated by abrupt symptoms, change in consciousness, focal neurological signs)
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14
Q

How can an acute manic or hypomanic episode be treated?

A
  • Stop all medications that may induce symptoms (e.g. anti-depressants, recreational drugs, steroids and dopamine agonists)
  • Monitor food and fluid intake to prevent dehydration
  • If not currently on treatment: Give an antipsychotic and a short course of benzodiazepines
  • If already on treatment: Optimise the medication, check compliance, Adjust doses, Consider adding another medication (e.g. antipsychotic added to mood stabiliser) Short-term benzodiazepines may help
  • ECT may be used if patients are unresponsive to medication
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15
Q

How is BPAD managed in the long-term

A
  • Mood stabilisers are the mainstay
  • Other medications may be added when new symptoms arise or when facing stress that could precipitate relapse (e.g. antipsychotics or benzodiazepines)
  • Depression in BPAD is difficult because antidepressants can cause a switch to mania, to reduce this risk
    • Antidepressants should only be given with a mood stabiliser or antipsychotic
    • 1st line: fluoxetine + olanzapine/quetiapine
    • 2nd line: lamotrigine
    • MUST monitor closely for signs of mania and immediately stop antidepressants if signs are present Medication can be
  • Medication can be cautiously and slowly withdrawn if someone has been symptom free for a sustained period, otherwise must remain on therapy to avoid risk of relapse
  • Psychological treatments: CBTà important for identifying indicators of relapse and developing relapse prevention strategies (e.g routine, avoiding stimulants, drug compliance etc.), Psychodynamic psychotherapy
  • Social interventions: Family support and therapy, aiding return to work, interpersonal and social rhythm therapy (works on circadian rhythm, stabilising sleep etc.)
  • Support groups: Bipolar UK
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16
Q

What is the gold standard mood stabiliser used in BPAD, schizoaffective disorder, severe or refractory depression

A

Lithium

17
Q

What is lithim’s therapeutic range

A

A narrow therapeutic range of 0.4-1mmol/L is neededà would worry about lithium toxicity above this range and the treatment being ineffective below this. Requires regular monitoring (potentially fatal above 2mmol/L)

18
Q

What are complications of lithium use

A

arrhythmia, CKD, Hypothyroidism, also teratogenic so should be avoided in pregnancy unless the mother is at significant risk

19
Q

What pre-lithium tests are required before it can be prescribed

A

FBC, U&Es, calcium, TFTs, ECG

20
Q

When are lithium levels monitored

A
  • Initially lithium levels will be monitored weekly
  • Then should have 6 monthly bloods and 3 monthly checks of lithium
  • Safety netting should include advice to stay hydrated, come back if GI symptoms or febrile illness
21
Q

What drugs should be considered in any case of lithium toxicity

A

NSAIDs- reduce its excretion

22
Q

Management of lithium toxicity

A

Check lithium level > Stop lithium dose (NOTE: stopping lithium abruptly could precipitate symptoms of mania/depression), Transfer for medical care (rehydration, osmotic diuresis), If overdose is severe, the patient may need gastric lavage or dialysis

23
Q

What is sodium valproate, when is it used and what are its side effects

A
  • Anticonvulsant
  • Used for acute mania and prophylaxis, but not to be used in women of childbearing age- risk of developmental disorders and congenital malformations.
  • Can also cause PCOS
  • GI upset (nausea, vomiting, dyspepsia, diarrhoea), tremor, sedation, weight gain, curly/loss hair, ankle swelling FBC abnormalities (leucopenia, thrombocytopenia), abnormal LFTS
24
Q

What is Carbamazepine, when is it used and what are its side effects?

A
  • Anticonvulsant
  • Strong CYP450 inducer
  • Toxic at high doses- must be monitored carefully alongside BP and HR, also not for women of childbearing age
  • Used for prophylaxis, but not really mentioned in NICE
  • Nausea and vomiting, blurred vision, ataxia/, fatigue, hepatic failure, antidiuretic effect (hyponatraemia), FBC abnormalities (leucopenia, thrombocytopenia), skin rashes, abnormal LFTS
25
Q

What is Lamotrigine, when is it used and what are its side effects?

A
  • Anticonvulsant
  • Used for prophyaxis and in dipolar depression- good for depressive symptoms
  • Side effects: Nausea and vomiting, rash, headache, sedation, insomnia, aggression
  • Rarely causes STEVENS JOHNSON syndrome: flu-like symptoms, rash, blistering mucous membranes
26
Q

How can antipsychotics be used in mania?

A

Can stabilise mood. They are initiated during a manic episode and may be continued for long-term prophylaxis

  • Olanzipine is rapidly effective for both acute mania and prophylaxis against mania- need to be careful of dyslipidaemia and metabolic syndrome.
  • Others include Risperidone and Quitiapine
27
Q

What is the prognosis for patients after a manic episode

A
  • Manic episodes often begin abruptly and are normally shorter than depressive episodes (2 weeks – 5 months)
  • Remissions become shorter with age and depressions become more frequent
  • 15% of people with BPAD kill themselves
  • Long term tx with lithium reduces this risk