| Literature DB >> 21603142 |
Abstract
The complex relationship between the use of antidepressants and suicidal behaviour is one of the hottest topics of our contemporary psychiatry. Based on the literature, this paper summarizes the author's view on antidepressant-resistant depression and antidepressant-associated suicidal behaviour. Antidepressant-resistance, antidepressant-induced worsening of depression, antidepressant-associated (hypo)manic switches, mixed depressive episode, and antidepressant-associated suicidality among depressed patients are relatively most frequent in bipolar/bipolar spectrum depression and in children and adolescents. As early age at onset of major depressive episode and mixed depression are powerful clinical markers of bipolarity and the manic component of bipolar disorder (and possible its biological background) shows a declining tendency with age antidepressant-resistance/worsening, antidepressant-induced (hypo)manic switches and "suicide-inducing" potential of antidepressants seem to be related to the underlying bipolarity.Entities:
Year: 2011 PMID: 21603142 PMCID: PMC3096313 DOI: 10.1155/2011/906462
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Depress Res Treat ISSN: 2090-1321
The role of underlying bipolarity in antidepressant-resistance and antidepressant-associated suicidality in patients with mood disorders.
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The frequency of antidepressant-resistance is about double in bipolar (I + II) and bipolar spectrum disorder than in unipolar depression [ | |
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Antidepressant monotherapy can worsen the cross-sectional picture and long-term course of bipolar (I + II) and bipolar spectrum disorder [ | |
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Early-onset major depressive episode is (pre)bipolar [ | |
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| Children and adolescents with major depressive episode are less responsive to antidepressants than adults [ | The rarely occurring antidepressant-associated suicidal behavior among depressed patients is relatively most frequent in children and adolescents [ |