Born Christoph, Grunze Heinz, Post Robert M, Altshuler Lori L, Kupka Ralph, McElroy Susan L, Frye Mark A, Suppes Trisha, Keck Paul E, Nolen Willem A, Schaerer Lars
Paracelsus Medical University, Nuremberg, Germany.
Psychiatrie Schwäbisch Hall, Ringstrasse 1, 74523, Schwäbisch Hall, Germany.
Int J Bipolar Disord. 2021 Nov 16;9(1):36. doi: 10.1186/s40345-021-00241-5.
Depending on the classification system used, 5-40% of manic subjects present with concomitant depressive symptoms. This post-hoc analysis evaluates the hypothesis that (hypo)manic subjects have a higher burden of depression than non-(hypo)manic subjects.
Data from 806 Bipolar I or II participants of the Stanley Foundation Bipolar Network (SFBN) were analyzed, comprising 17,937 visits. A split data approach was used to separate evaluation and verification in independent samples. For verification of our hypotheses, we compared mean IDS-C scores ratings of non-manic, hypomanic and manic patients. Data were stored on an SQL-server and extracted using standard SQL functions. Linear correlation coefficients and pivotal tables were used to characterize patient groups.
Mean age of participants was 40 ± 12 years (range 18-81). 460 patients (57.1%) were female and 624 were diagnosed as having bipolar I disorder (77.4%) and 182 with bipolar II (22.6%). Data of 17,937 visits were available for analyses, split into odd and even patient numbers and stratified into three groups by YMRS-scores: not manic < 12, hypomanic < 21, manic < 30. Average IDS-C sum scores in manic or hypomanic states were significantly higher (p < .001) than for non-manic states. (Hypo)manic female patients were likely to show more depressive symptoms than males (p < .001). Similar results were obtained when only the core items of the YMRS or only the number of depressive symptoms were considered. Analyzing the frequency of (hypo)manic mixed states applying a proxy of the DSM-5 mixed features specifier extracted from the IDS-C, we found that almost 50% of the (hypo)manic group visits fulfilled DSM-5 mixed features specifier criteria.
Subjects with a higher manic symptom load are also significantly more likely to experience a higher number of depressive symptoms. Mania and depression are not opposing poles of bipolarity but complement each other.
根据所使用的分类系统,5%至40%的躁狂患者伴有抑郁症状。这项事后分析评估了以下假设:(轻)躁狂患者比非(轻)躁狂患者有更高的抑郁负担。
对斯坦利基金会双相情感障碍网络(SFBN)的806名双相I型或II型参与者的数据进行了分析,共包含17937次就诊记录。采用拆分数据方法在独立样本中进行评估和验证。为了验证我们的假设,我们比较了非躁狂、轻躁狂和躁狂患者的平均IDS-C评分。数据存储在SQL服务器上,并使用标准SQL函数提取。线性相关系数和枢轴表用于描述患者组。
参与者的平均年龄为40±12岁(范围18 - 81岁)。460名患者(57.1%)为女性,624名被诊断为双相I型障碍(77.4%),182名患有双相II型障碍(22.6%)。共有17937次就诊记录可用于分析,按患者编号奇偶性拆分,并根据杨氏躁狂量表(YMRS)评分分为三组:非躁狂<12分,轻躁狂<21分,躁狂<30分。躁狂或轻躁狂状态下的平均IDS-C总分显著高于非躁狂状态(p <.001)。(轻)躁狂女性患者比男性更可能表现出更多抑郁症状(p <.001)。仅考虑YMRS的核心项目或仅考虑抑郁症状数量时,也得到了类似结果。通过分析从IDS-C中提取的DSM-5混合特征说明符的代理来分析(轻)躁狂混合状态的频率,我们发现几乎50%的(轻)躁狂组就诊记录符合DSM-5混合特征说明符标准。
躁狂症状负荷较高的患者也明显更有可能经历更多的抑郁症状。躁狂和抑郁并非双相情感障碍的对立两极,而是相互补充的。