Faculty of Life and Social Sciences, Swinburne University of Technology, Hawthorn, Victoria, Australia.
Bipolar Disord. 2011 Nov-Dec;13(7-8):687-95. doi: 10.1111/j.1399-5618.2011.00959.x.
Evidence that symptoms of bipolar disorder (BD) vary seasonally is inconclusive. Here, a multisite prospective investigation of patients with BD was used to test the hypothesis that, on average, depressive symptoms peak in autumn/winter and hypo/manic symptoms peak in spring/summer. Secondary analyses explored gender and diagnosis [bipolar I disorder (BD-I) versus bipolar II disorder (BD-II)] effects on seasonality.
A sample of 429 patients with BD (61.6% female; 56.2% BD-I) were recruited from 12 sites across Canada. Clinician-rated measures of manic [Young Mania Rating Scale (YMRS), n = 4,753 total observations] and depression symptoms [Montgomery-Åsberg Depression Rating Scale (MADRS), n = 4,691 observations] were taken at scheduled three-month visits as well as any unscheduled visits. At scheduled visits only, Hamilton Depression Rating Scale (Ham-D) assessments (n = 3,153 observations) were also made. Multi-level modeling (MLM) analyses were conducted separately for the three dependent variables and three definitions of Time: calendar month, nominal season, and harmonic analysis.
Primary analyses of the whole sample found that for manic symptoms (YMRS), neither calendar month nor nominal season were significant, and harmonic analyses found an unpredicted frequency two sinusoid, with peaks at 4th December and 4th June (p < 0.018). Secondary analyses found that this sinusoid approximately fit the YMRS data for females and those diagnosed with BD-II. For depression symptoms measured on the MADRS and Ham-D, no significant seasonal patterns were found in primary analyses of the whole sample. Secondary analyses found a significant increase in MADRS scores in November/December among females, but this pattern was not corroborated in nominal season or harmonic analyses.
No evidence of systematic seasonal variation in symptoms was found in the sample as a whole. Primary analyses found no evidence that hypo/manic symptoms peaked in the lighter months and depressive symptoms peaked in the darker months. The present findings align with broadly negative conclusions from three earlier prospective investigations, and provide the strongest evidence to date that seasonal changes do not in fact cause coordinated variation in BD symptoms.
有证据表明双相障碍(BD)的症状具有季节性,但这些证据尚无定论。本研究采用多中心前瞻性研究方法,对 BD 患者进行测试,以验证以下假设:即平均而言,抑郁症状在秋季/冬季达到高峰,轻躁狂/躁狂症状在春季/夏季达到高峰。进一步的分析探讨了性别和诊断(双相 I 型障碍[BD-I]与双相 II 型障碍[BD-II])对季节性的影响。
从加拿大 12 个地点招募了 429 名 BD 患者(61.6%为女性;56.2%为 BD-I)。使用临床医生评定的躁狂量表[Young 躁狂评定量表(YMRS),共 4753 次观察]和抑郁量表[蒙哥马利-阿斯伯格抑郁评定量表(MADRS),共 4691 次观察],在预定的每三个月就诊时以及任何非预定就诊时进行评估。仅在预定就诊时,还进行了汉密尔顿抑郁评定量表(Ham-D)评估(共 3153 次观察)。分别对三个因变量和三个时间定义[日历月、名义季节和调和分析]进行多层次建模(MLM)分析。
对整个样本的主要分析发现,对于躁狂症状(YMRS),无论是日历月还是名义季节都没有显著意义,调和分析发现一个出乎意料的双正弦频率,峰值分别在 12 月 4 日和 6 月 4 日(p<0.018)。进一步分析发现,该正弦曲线大致符合女性和 BD-II 患者的 YMRS 数据。对于 MADRS 和 Ham-D 上测量的抑郁症状,在整个样本的主要分析中未发现明显的季节性模式。进一步分析发现,女性在 11 月/12 月的 MADRS 评分显著增加,但在名义季节或调和分析中并未得到证实。
在整个样本中,没有发现症状存在系统季节性变化的证据。主要分析未发现轻躁狂/躁狂症状在光照较弱的月份达到高峰,抑郁症状在光照较强的月份达到高峰的证据。本研究结果与三项早期前瞻性研究的广泛负面结论一致,为季节性变化实际上不会导致 BD 症状的协调变化提供了迄今为止最强有力的证据。