Journal article
Rapid cycling bipolar disorder: clinical characteristics and treatment options
CNS drugs, Vol.19(7), pp.557-569
2005
DOI: 10.2165/00023210-200519070-00001
PMID: 15984894
Abstract
Approximately one of six patients who seek treatment for bipolar disorder present with a rapid cycling pattern. In comparison with other patients who have bipolar disorder, these individuals experience more affective morbidity in both the immediate and distant future and are more likely to experience recurrences despite treatment with lithium or anticonvulsants. Particular care should be given to distinguishing rapid cycling bipolar disorder from attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder in children or adolescents and from borderline personality disorder in adults. Perhaps four of five cases of rapid cycling resolve within a year, but the pattern may persist for many years in the remaining patients. As with bipolar disorder in general, depressive symptoms produce the most morbidity over time. Controlled studies have not established that antidepressants provoke switching or rapid cycling, but neither have they been shown consistently to have benefits in bipolar illness. Successful management will often require a sequence of trials with mood stabilizer drugs, beginning with lithium in treatment-naive patients. Efforts to minimise adverse effects, and the recognition that full benefits may not be apparent for several months, will make the premature abandonment of a potentially helpful treatment less likely. Placebo-controlled studies so far provide the most support for the use of lithium and lamotrigine as prophylactic agents. The combination of lithium and carbamazepine, valproate or lamotrigine for maintenance has some support from controlled studies, as does the adjunctive use of olanzapine.
Details
- Title: Subtitle
- Rapid cycling bipolar disorder: clinical characteristics and treatment options
- Creators
- William Coryell - Psychiatry Research Department, University of Iowa, Carver College of Medicine, Iowa City, Iowa 52242, USA. william-coryell@uiowa.edu
- Resource Type
- Journal article
- Publication Details
- CNS drugs, Vol.19(7), pp.557-569
- Publisher
- New Zealand
- DOI
- 10.2165/00023210-200519070-00001
- PMID
- 15984894
- ISSN
- 1172-7047
- eISSN
- 1179-1934
- Language
- English
- Date published
- 2005
- Academic Unit
- Psychiatry
- Record Identifier
- 9984003967602771
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