Department of Psychiatry, Harvard Medical School, International Consortium for Bipolar Disorder Research, McLean Division of Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, MA, United States.
Department of Psychiatry, Harvard Medical School, International Consortium for Bipolar Disorder Research, McLean Division of Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, MA, United States; Section of Psychiatry, Department of Neuroscience, University of Parma, Italy.
J Affect Disord. 2012 Jan;136(1-2):149-154. doi: 10.1016/j.jad.2011.08.037. Epub 2011 Sep 23.
Preliminary review of a century of studies of the course of manic-depressive syndromes produced 40 reports, of which approximately one-third report evidence of shortening wellness intervals or cycle-lengths with more recurrences, and two-thirds did not.
We evaluated inter-episode intervals (cycle-length) in 128 clinically-treated, DSM-IV bipolar-I disorder patients followed prospectively and systematically over 5.7 years, with 6.5 episodes/person.
As expected, cycle-length varied inversely with total cycle-count/person; however, multivariate linear regression found only longer initial hospitalization and fewer total cycles to be associated with cycle-length, whereas cycle-number (1, 2, 3, etc.), sex, intake-age, and first-episode polarity were not. Regression of within-subject cycle-length versus cycle-number yielded individual slope-functions with pseudo-random distribution (28% fell within ±1 month/cycle of the null [zero-slope]). Mean duration of early and late euthymic intervals (cycles 2 vs. 5) in patients with matched recurrence-counts was nearly identical.
The course of bipolar-I disorder from onset was largely random or chaotic over nearly 6 years from onset. Only a minority of patients showed either cycle-acceleration or slowing, without changes in wellness intervals. The findings may be influenced by treatment-effects, but seem to indicate that most current bipolar-I disorder patients are unlikely to show progressive shortening of recurrence-cycles.
对一个世纪以来躁狂抑郁综合征病程的初步研究综述产生了 40 份报告,其中约三分之一报告显示,随着更多复发,康复间隔或周期长度缩短,而三分之二则没有。
我们评估了 128 例经临床治疗的 DSM-IV 双相 I 型障碍患者的发作间歇期(周期长度),这些患者前瞻性和系统性地随访了 5.7 年,每人有 6.5 个发作。
正如预期的那样,周期长度与总周期计数/个体呈反比;然而,多元线性回归发现只有更长的初始住院时间和更少的总周期与周期长度相关,而周期数(1、2、3 等)、性别、摄入年龄和首发极性则不相关。个体内周期长度与周期数的回归产生了具有伪随机分布的个体斜率函数(28%的斜率落在零斜率的正负 1 个月/周期范围内)。在具有匹配复发次数的患者中,早期和晚期双相情感稳定期(第 2 个周期与第 5 个周期)的平均持续时间几乎相同。
从发病开始,双相 I 型障碍的病程在近 6 年的时间里基本上是随机或混沌的。只有少数患者表现出周期加速或减速,而无康复间隔变化。这些发现可能受到治疗效果的影响,但似乎表明大多数当前的双相 I 型障碍患者不太可能出现复发周期的持续缩短。