Psych - Bipolar Affective Disorder Flashcards
What is bipolar affective disorder? Distinguish between the ICD10 and DSM classifications
-Recurrent episodes of altered mood and activity, involving both upswings and downswings with individual episodes and/or patterns of recurrence (depending on classification used)
ICD 10: need at least 2 episodes, including at least one hypomanic or manic
DSM:
- Bipolar I disorder: one or more manic or mixed episodes, and usually one or more major depressive episode
- Bipolar II: recurrent major depressive and hypomanic but not manic episodes
- Cyclothymic disorder: chronic mood fluctuation over at least 2 years, with episodes of depression and hypomania (but not mania) of insufficient severity to meet diagnostic criteria
What types of individual episodes are there?
- Depressive
- Manic
- Hypomanic (less severe than manic and absence of psychotic sx)
- Mixed: features of both mania and major are present or alternate rapidly
What is the difference between mani and hypomania?
- Both terms relate to abnormally elevated mood or irritability
- Mania: severe functional impairment or presence of psychotic sx (delusions of grandeur, auditory hallucinations), lasts for >7 days
- Hypomania: describes increased or decreased function for 4 days or more
Name some cardinal and associated features of bipolar affective disorder
-Cardinal features: alteration in mood - usually elated/expansive but can be characterised by intense irritability
Associated features
- Increased psychomotor activity (distractibility, decreased sleep)
- Exaggerated optimism
- Inflated self esteem
- Decreased social inhibition: sexual over-activity, reckless spending, dangerous driving, inappropriate business/religious/political initiatives
- Heightened sensory awareness
- Rapid thinking/speech
- in manic patients: mood congruent delusions and hallucinations - eg of grandeur or of very depressive themes
- Absence insight (but less so in hypomania, where people can still function relatively normally for a period of time)
What is the differential diagnosis for bipolar affective disorder?
- Substance abuse: amphetamines or cocaine
- Mood abnormalities: 2nd to endocrine disturbance (idiopathic cushing’d or steroid induced psychoses/epilepsy)
- Schizophrenia: will present with more paranoid/reference delusions but both can have increased psychomotor activity
- Schizoaffective disorder: when affective and schizophrenic sx are equally resent
- Personality disorders (emotionally unstable or histrionic)
- ADHD (younger pts)
What are the treatment principles for B.A.D?
- Coordinated care program based on early detection of deterioration
- Tx is mainly based on psychotropic medication in order to reduce the severity of sx, stabilise mood and prevent relapse.
- Address co-morbidities: significantly increased risk of DM, CVS disease and COPD
How would you treat depressive episodes in a patient with B.A.D.?
- Treated in same way as unipolar depression but have to remember that anti-depressants precipitate mania (or ‘rapid cycling’) - t/f should always be co-prescribed with an anti-manic/mood stabilising agent
- Fluoxetine is 1st line
- Stop antidepressant if patient has onset of acute or manic episode
How would you manage the mania/maintenance aspect of B.A.D?
Mood stabilisers:
- Lithium: mood stabiliser of choice (decreases deaths by suicide in these patients),
- Others: Na Valproate, carbamazepine and lamotrigine (never in women of reproductive age)
Management of mania:
- stop anti-depressant and initiate/continue antipsychotic (usually an atypical)
- Olanzapine, risperidone, zuclopenthixol, quetiapine, aripiprazole