| Literature DB >> 18552741 |
Susan B Quello1, Kathleen T Brady, Susan C Sonne.
Abstract
Mood disorders, including depression and bipolar disorders, are the most common psychiatric comorbidities among patients with substance use disorders. Treating patients' co-occurring mood disorders may reduce their substance craving and taking and enhance their overall outcomes. A methodical, staged screening and assessment can ease the diagnostic challenge of distinguishing symptoms of affective disorders from manifestations of substance intoxication and withdrawal. Treatment should maximize the use of psychotherapeutic interventions and give first consideration to medications proven effective in the context of co-occurring substance abuse. Expanded communication and collaboration between substance abuse and mental health providers is crucial to improving outcomes for patients with these complex, difficult co-occurring disorders.Entities:
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Year: 2005 PMID: 18552741 PMCID: PMC2851027 DOI: 10.1151/spp053113
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Pract Perspect ISSN: 1930-4307
DSM-IV MOOD DISORDER CATEGORIZATION
| DISORDER CATEGORY | DISORDER TYPE | KEY FEATURES |
|---|---|---|
| Major depressive disorder | 2-week duration, with depressed mood/loss of interest | |
| Dysthymic disorder | Chronic, less severe than MDD; 2-year duration | |
| Bipolar I | One or more manic/mixed and depressive episode | |
| Bipolar II | One or more depressive and at least one hypomanic episode | |
| Cyclothymia | Chronic/less severe form of bipolar disorder; 2-year duration, with multiple periods of hypomania/depression | |
| Prominent and persistent mood disturbance, direct physiologic consequence of substance use |
Manic episode: abnormally elevated/expansive/irritable mood for at least 1 week.
Mixed episode: meets criteria for manic and depressed episode daily for 1 week.
Hypomanic episode: elevated/expansive/irritable mood for at least 4 days—little functional impairment.
MEDICATIONS USED FOR THE TREATMENT OF MOOD DISORDERS IN SUBSTANCE ABUSERS
| MOOD DISORDER | AGENTS USED | AGENTS TO AVOID |
|---|---|---|
Long-term use of benzodiazepines should be avoided.