The prevalent clinical spectrum
of bipolar disorders: beyond DSM-IV
by
Akiskal HS
International Mood Clinic,
University of California at San Diego, La Jolla,
USA.
J Clin Psychopharmacol 1996 Apr; 16(2 Suppl 1):4S-14S
ABSTRACT
Based on the author's work and that of collaborators, as well as other
contemporaneous research, this article reaffirms the existence of a broad
bipolar spectrum between the extremes of psychotic manic-depressive illness and
strictly defined unipolar depression. The alternation of mania and melancholia
beginning in the juvenile years is one of the most classic descriptions in
clinical medicine that has come to us from Greco-Roman times. French alienists
in the middle of the nineteenth century and Kraepelin at the turn of that
century formalized it into manic-depressive psychosis. In the pre-DSM-III era
during the 1960s and 1970s, North American psychiatrists rarely diagnosed the
psychotic forms of the disease; now, there is greater recognition that most
excited psychoses with a biphasic course, including many with schizo-affective
features, belong to the bipolar spectrum. Current data also support Kraepelin's
delineation of mixed states, which frequently take on psychotic proportions.
However, full syndromal intertwining of depressive and manic states into
dysphoric or mixed mania--as emphasized in DSM-IV--is relatively uncommon;
depressive symptoms in the midst of mania are more representative of mixed
states. DSM-IV also does not formally recognize hypomanic symptomatology that
intrudes into major depressive episodes and gives rise to agitated depressive
and/or anxious, dysphoric, restless depressions with flight of ideas. Many of
these mixed depressive states arise within the setting of an attenuated bipolar
spectrum characterized by major depressive episodes and soft signs of
bipolarity. DSM-IV conventions are most explicit for the bipolar II subtype with
major depressive and clear-cut spontaneous hypomanic episodes; temperamental
cyclothymia and hyperthymia receive insufficient recognition as potential
factors that could lead to switching from depression to bipolar I disorder and,
in vulnerable subjects, to predominantly depressive cycling. In the main,
rapid-cycling and mixed states are distinct. Nonetheless, there exist
ultrarapid-cycling forms where morose, labile moods with irritable, mixed
features constitute patients' habitual self and, for that reason, are often
mistaken for "borderline" personality disorder. Clearly, more formal research
needs to be conducted in this temperamental interface between more classic
bipolar and unipolar disorders. The clinical stakes, however, are such that a
narrow concept of bipolar disorder would deprive many patients with lifelong
temperamental dysregulation and depressive episodes of the benefits of
mood-regulating agents.
Mania
Lithium
Cannabis
Bipolar II
Valproate
Gabapentin
Physostigmine
Beyond lithium
Carbamazepine
Drugs for bipolars
Bipolar depression
The manic spectrum
Bipolar Disorder FAQ
The depressive spectrum
Bipolar affective disorders
Bipolar treatment guidelines
Drugs which may cause mania
Melancholic bipolar depression
Mood-lifting opioid analgesics for bipolars
Antidepressant-induced mania - 'bipolar III'
Refs
HOME
HedWeb
Future Opioids
BLTC Research
Superhappiness?
Paradise-Engineering
Utopian Pharmacology
The Hedonistic Imperative
When Is It Best To Take Crack Cocaine?

The Good Drug Guide
The Responsible Parent's Guide
To Healthy Mood Boosters For All The Family