Child and Adolescent Psychopathology
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Transcript Child and Adolescent Psychopathology
Part V: Other
Psychological
Disorders
Bipolar Disorder
Chapter 19
Joseph C. Blader and Gabrielle A. Carlson
HISTORICAL CONTEXT
Emil Kraepelin (1921) coined manic-depressive insanity as
a cyclical disturbance of depression and manic excitement.
1920s and 1930s concluded that Kraepelin' s conception of
manic-depression occurred among youth but was rare.
1950s Lithium's efficacy for the treatment of acute mania
was established.
Past 20 years recognition of frequent onset of BPD in mid-
to late-adolescence, with possible prodromal signs evident
even earlier.
DIAGNOSTIC CRITERIA AND
CLINICAL PRESENTATION
In most formal definitions, BPD comprises:
Episodes of depression; interspersed to greater or lesser
degree
Episodes of manic (or mixed) symptoms
Intervals between episodes during which mood state and
functioning may vary widely both across patients and for
the same person over time
An overall course of illness that is chronic
(American Psychiatric Association, 2000; Goodwin & Jamison, 2007; World Health
Organization, 2010)
DIAGNOSTIC CRITERIA AND
CLINICAL PRESENTATION
Bipolar I Disorder
BPDI is the diagnosis applied to either:
• A person experiencing an episode of mania or a mixed episode.
• One who is experiencing an episode of major depressive disorder
or of hypomania but has had a manic or mixed episode in the past.
DIAGNOSTIC CRITERIA AND
CLINICAL PRESENTATION
Other Forms of BPD: Bipolar II Disorder and
Cyclothymic Disorder
BPDII and cyclothymia involve episodes of hypomania.
Hypomania differs from mania chiefly in terms of
severity and level of impairment.
Cyclothymic disorder is a still milder form of BPD.
BPDII is the diagnosis applied for an individual who is
experiencing either:
• An episode of hypomania.
• An episode of major depression but who also had a prior episode of
hypomania but never had a full manic episode.
PREVALENCE
BPD among adults in the United States is generally
agreed to be about 1% to 1.5%, with lifetime
prevalence of disorders in the BPD spectrum
around 4.5% (Kessler et al., 2006; Merikangas et al., 2007).
Lifetime prevalence among adolescents for bipolar
I or II disorder combined of 2.9%. Prevalence
increases with age during adolescence and 89.7%
of adolescents with these disorders were classified
as manifesting “severe” impairment.
DEVELOPMENTAL
PROGRESSION
Adolescent-Onset BPD:
High rates of serial hospitalizations
Substance-abuse
Suicide attempts or actual suicides
Less robust response to lithium and divalproex
Generally worse interepisode functioning than adult-onset
BPD
Risk for adverse outcomes rises with earlier onset,
presence of psychotic features, mixed features,
and low socioeconomic resources (Birmaher, et al., 2006).
COURSE AND OUTCOMES OF BIPOLAR
DISORDER IN ADULTHOOD
With age depressive episodes become more frequent and
longer.
In the best of cases, functioning between episodes of mood
disturbance can be quite good and a stable, tolerant family
and a social milieu can act as a buffer.
A less fortunate outcomes can lead to:
A downward drift socially as interpersonal and occupational
functioning become increasingly erratic and inadequate
Interepisode recovery is less successful
Sources of social support may become alienated
Legal entanglements
Criminal activity
Alcohol and drug abuse
CONCEPTUAL AND PRACTICAL ISSUES IN
THE DIAGNOSIS OF BIPOLAR DISORDER
AMONG YOUTH
Symptom Differences and Confounding
Comorbidities
An elevated or euphoric mood
Extreme irritability
Grandiosity
Decreased need for sleep
Increased talkativeness
Distractibility
Increases in goal-directed activity
Psychomotor agitation
Excessive involvement in pleasurable activities
Psychotic symptoms
CONCEPTUAL AND PRACTICAL ISSUES IN
THE DIAGNOSIS OF BIPOLAR DISORDER
AMONG YOUTH
Distinct Periods of Mood Symptoms or
Exacerbation
Rapid cycling: Is defined by at least four episodes in a
year.
Episodicity: Implies an onset with a significant change
from ordinary functioning.
Periods of remission that occur spontaneously are very
uncommon among children, which is yet another
deviation from BPD’s episodic nature.
ALTERNATIVE APPROACHES TO
EMOTIONAL VOLATILITY IN YOUTH
Persistence Versus Transience of Mood
Disturbance
A number of children do show persistent negative mood
that changes only minimally with positive events.
Children who manifest with significant irritability are, in
fact, highly overreactive to events.
Ultradian cycling: Cycles appear many times within a
single day.
DISTINGUISHING NARROW,
INTERMEDIATE, AND BROAD
PHENOTYPES
Narrow phenotype: Has a symptom presentation, course, and
episodicity fully aligned with current criteria for (adult) BPD, with the
additional requirement that the mood abnormality be euphoria or
signs of pathological grandiosity.
One intermediate phenotype encompasses manic episodes that
last from 1 to 3 days. Current nomenclature would classify a
number of these situations as bipolar disorder not otherwise
specified (NOS).
The other intermediate phenotype allows irritability to be the main
mood aberration, so long as there is also evidence of welldemarcated episodes.
Broad phenotype: Denoted as severely disturbed behavior and
mood dysregulation, which essentially describes chronic negative
emotional reactivity and impulsivity.
RISK FACTORS AND
ETIOLOGICAL FORMULATIONS
Depression
Patients who develop BPD often experience depression as
their first episode
Biological Susceptibility Factors
Heritability and genetic markers
Neurodevelopmental antecedents
Disturbances of the sleep-wake cycle
Cognitive Factors and Other Potential Markers
Impaired response inhibitions and other executive functions
Deficits related to attention and inhibitory controls
Tendency to exaggerate and dwell on misfortunes
RISK FACTORS AND
ETIOLOGICAL FORMULATIONS
Neuroanatomical and Neurophysiological Factors
Reduced amygdala volumes
Increased amygdala activity elicited by emotion relevant stimuli
Reductions in volume of the anterior cingulate
Experiential and Environmental Susceptibility Factors
Childhood maltreatment
Stress
Childhood truama
Psychotropic medications
COMORBIDITY, SEX DIFFERENCES &
CULTURAL FACTORS
ADHD is the leading comorbidity among BPD children.
Substance abuse is common among adolescents and
adults with BPD.
Prevalence estimates of comorbid anxiety disorders vary
considerably in child BPD.
Similar rates of BPD in adolescents but higher rates of
males in child samples.
May be cultural differences in the use of diagnoses in
clinical settings.
THEORETICAL SYNTHESIS AND
FUTURE DIRECTIONS
Forms of very early onset, chronic, and unremitting
affective and behavioral volatility have been postulated to
constitute a variant of BPD among youth.
At this time, it remains uncertain whether these forms of
impairment are:
Developmental versions of the same disease processes that underlie
later-onset BPD.
Separate types of illness that might involve perturbations of the same
mechanisms of self-control and mood that are implicated in BPD.
Fundamentally different problems, such as severe ADHD with ODD,
which demonstrate some phenotypic overlap with BPD.