Literature DB >> 15571789

Further evidence of unique developmental phenotypic correlates of pediatric bipolar disorder: findings from a large sample of clinically referred preadolescent children assessed over the last 7 years.

Joseph Biederman1, Stephen V Faraone, Janet Wozniak, Eric Mick, Anne Kwon, Megan Aleardi.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: A comparison of the prevalence, clinical correlates, and patterns of comorbidity among children with bipolar disorder (BPD) assessed in the early 1990s (1st cohort) with those evaluated over the last 7 years (2nd cohort).
METHOD: Subjects in both cohorts were children aged <or=12 years referred to a child psychiatry service and evaluated with identical assessment methods. Children with a DSM-III-R BPD diagnosis (1st cohort, n=43; 2nd cohort, n=129) were identified. For comparison purposes, we used attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) children without BPD referred to the same clinic during the same time period (1st cohort, n=164; 2nd cohort, n=450).
RESULTS: Analogous to 1st cohort findings, 2nd cohort results showed that (1) mania was identified in 17% of subjects; (2) the clinical picture was predominantly irritable and mixed, and the course was chronic; (3) BPD children frequently met criteria for major depression, ADHD, psychosis, and anxiety disorders; and (4) BPD children had high rates of psychiatric hospitalization and had evidence of severely impaired psychosocial functioning.
CONCLUSION: These findings confirm that pediatric BPD is a severe clinical disorder afflicting a sizable number of referred preadolescent children. Its unique phenotypic features and patterns of comorbidity support the hypothesis that clinically referred pediatric bipolar disorder represents a very severe developmental subtype of bipolar disorder.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  2004        PMID: 15571789     DOI: 10.1016/j.jad.2004.05.021

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Affect Disord        ISSN: 0165-0327            Impact factor:   4.839


  39 in total

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8.  Neurocognitive impairment in unaffected siblings of youth with bipolar disorder.

Authors:  A E Doyle; J Wozniak; T E Wilens; A Henin; L J Seidman; C Petty; R Fried; L M Gross; S V Faraone; J Biederman
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Review 9.  The psychopathology and treatment of bipolar disorder.

Authors:  David J Miklowitz; Sheri L Johnson
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10.  Controversies concerning the diagnosis and treatment of bipolar disorder in children.

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