| Literature DB >> 35310132 |
Sheri L Johnson1, Benjamin Z S Weinberg1.
Abstract
Considerable evidence suggests that psychosocial variables can shape the course of bipolar disorder. Here, though, we focus on the more specific idea that the social environment can predict the course of mania. We systematically review evidence from longitudinal studies concerning how social support, family interactions, traumatic life events, and recent life events relate to the age of onset, the frequency of episode recurrence, and the severity of manic symptoms. Although we find some evidence that the course of mania can be worsened by social environmental factors, the links are specific. Among social variables, some studies indicate that conflict and hostility are predictive, but more general social relationship qualities have not been found to predict mania. Some research indicates that childhood trauma, and recent life events involving goal attainment or sleep disruption can predict mania. Taken together, the profile of variables involving recent exposure that are most predictive include those that are activating, reward-related, or sleep-disrupting, which fits with general psychological hypotheses of behavioral activation and sleep disruption as important for mania. We discuss gaps in the literature, and we note future directions for research, including the need for more integrative, longitudinal research on a fuller range of social and biological risk variables.Entities:
Keywords: Bipolar disorder; Family; Life events; Mania; Social support; Trauma
Year: 2022 PMID: 35310132 PMCID: PMC8918447 DOI: 10.1007/s44192-022-00010-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Discov Ment Health ISSN: 2731-4383
Fig. 1PRISMA-style flow diagram showing the search criteria, selection of studies, inclusion criteria, and exclusion rationale of studies for systematic review
Summary of prospective studies of social environmental predictors of mania
| Reference numbers | Author (year) | No. of bipolar spectrum participants | Bipolar diagnoses | Age at baseline | Length of follow-up | Social Variables Assessed | Measures of social variables | Mania-related indices | Mania measure |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| [ | Eidelman et al. (2012) | 35 | BP-I | 34.66 (10.03) | 1 month | Social support | ISEL | Change in symptom severity between baseline and 1-month follow-up | YMRS |
| [ | Cohen et al. (2004) | 52 | BP-I | 42.9 (12.5) | 1 year | Perceived social support and life events | 5-item social support scale and the UCLA ESI | (Hypo)manic relapse during follow-up | SCID |
| [ | Johnson et al. (2000) | 31 | BP-I | 42.29 (9.36) | 9 months | Social support | ISEL | Change in symptom severity each month | BRMS |
| [ | Weinstock & Miller (2010) | 45 | BP-I | 39 (11.5) | 1 year | Social support | ISEL | Change in symptom severity from baseline to 1-year follow-up | BRMS |
| [ | Johnson et al. (2003) | 94 | BP-I (71) BP-II (23) | 53.8 | 1 year | Social support | ISSI and ISEL | Hospitalization due to mania | YMRS |
| [ | Koenders et al. (2015) | 173 | BP-I (121) BP-II (52) | 49.9 (11.4) | 2 years | Social support | SSL | Change in symptom severity across every 3 months | YMRS |
| [ | Wicki & Angst (1991) | 38 | BP-II or NOS (21) Unipolar hypomanic (17) | Range: 28–30 | 9 years | Conflict and distress in relationships | SAS and SSIAM | Development of hypomanic episode by age 30 | DSM-III |
| [ | Sullivan et al. (2012) | 58 | BP-I (38) BP-II (6) BP NOS (14) | 14.48 (1.60) | 2 years | Family cohesion and family adaptability | FACES-II | Change in symptom severity every 3 months until the 12th month then every 6 months until the 24th month | Kiddie SADS |
| [ | Townsend et al. (2007) | 55 | BP-I (53) BP-II (2) | Range: 5–17 | 8 weeks | Family function, communication, and problem-solving | FAD (parent rating) | Change in symptom severity between baseline and 8-week follow-up | YMRS |
| [ | Kim & Miklowitz (2004) | 125 | BP-I (116) BP-II (9) | 35.89 (10.36) | 2 years | Expressed emotion | CFI | Change in symptom severity every 3 months until the 12th month then every 6 months until the 24th month | SADS |
| [ | Yan et al. (2004) | 47 | BP-I | 42.0 (13.1) | 1 year | Expressed emotion | FMSS | Recurrence of manic or hypomanic symptoms preceded by 8 weeks without symptoms | SCID |
| [ | Miklowitz et al. (2005) | 360 | BP-I (247) BP-II (93) BP NOS or cyclothymic or schizoaffective disorder (20) | 40.6 (12.60) | 1 year | Perceived criticism and distress from criticisms | PCS | Change in symptom severity between baseline and 1-year follow-up | YMRS |
| [ | Geller et al. (2002) | 89 | BP-I | Range: 7–16 | 2 year | Maternal and paternal warmth and criticism per parent or child rating | PSS | Time to manic relapse | Washington University Kiddie SADS |
| [ | Geller et al. (2004) | 86 | BP-I | Range: 7–16 | 4 year | Maternal and paternal warmth and criticism per parent or child rating | PSS | Time to manic relapse | Washington University Kiddie SADS |
| [ | Geller et al. (2008) | 115 | BP-I | Range: 7–16 | 8 years | Maternal and paternal warmth and criticism per parent or child rating | PSS | Time to manic relapse | Washington University Kiddie SADS |
| [ | Tijssen et al. (2010) | 543 community participants without manic or hypomanic episodes | 79 developed manic symptoms | Range: 14–17 | 8 years | endorsement of experiencing or witnessing a list of traumas | Self-rating | First onset of manic symptoms | M-CIDI |
| [ | Daglas et al. (2014) | 65 | First episode psychotic mania | Range: 15–28 | 1 year | Direct personal physical, sexual, or emotional abuse or assault that would meet DSM-IV trauma criteria | Chart review | Mania severity at one-year follow-up, controlling for baseline | YMRS |
| [ | Leverich et al. (2002) | 373 | BP-1 or BP-II | 41 (12) | Mean of 2.8 years | Self-rated physical assault or abuse | Self-rating | Percent of time manic or hypomanic | YMRS |
| [ | Pascual et al. (2020) | 375 | Bipolar spectrum disorder | 17 Range: 8.7–25.8 | Mean of 8.7 years | Parent or participant report of trauma | TES and brief interview with parent and child | Hypomanic episode | Adolescent LIFE |
| [ | Gershon et al. (2013) | 131 | BP-I | 40.9 (11.4) | 2 years | Physical or sexual trauma | LEDS | Average mania severity across monthly follow-up interviews, controlling for baseline | BRMS interview |
| [ | Meade et al. (2009) | 90 | BP-I and co-occurring substance use disorder | 40.6 (11.7) | 32 weeks | Two items covering lifetime physical or sexual abuse | Self-rating | Number of weeks manic or hypomanic | LIFE |
| [ | Nolen et al. (2004) | 258 | BP-I (196) BP-II (53) BP NOS or schizoaffective disorder (9) | 43.6 (10.8) | 1 year | Serious physical, verbal, or sexual abuse as a child or adult | Self-rating | Average daily severity of mania | NIMH Life Chart |
| [ | Johnson et al. (2008) | 125 | BP-I | Min: 18 | 2 years | Goal-attainment life events | LEDS | Change in symptom severity across each month | BRMS |
| [ | Hosang et al. (2012) | 96 | BP = I or BP-II Mean number of depressive episodes: 13.87 (22.00). Mean number of manic episodes: 11.81 (20.94) | 51.23 (9.73) | 8 months | Life events | LEDS interview | Change in symptom severity between baseline and 4-month follow-up | SRMI |
| [ | Johnson et al. (2000) | 43 | BP-I | Range: 18–65 | 2 years | Goal-attainment life events | LEDS | Change in symptom severity between baseline and 2 months after goal-attainment life event | BRMS |
| [ | Nusslock et al. (2007) | 68 | BP-II (9) Cyclothymic (14) Both BP-II and cyclothymic (45) | 22.1 (1.8) | 6 weeks | Goal-attainment life events | LEI | Change in symptom severity between baseline and exam period 6 weeks after | SCID |
| [ | Francis-Raniere et al. (2006) | 106 | BP-II (67) Cyclothymic or BP NOS (39) | 19.91 (0.21) | 4 months | Life events | LEI and LES | Time to onset of hypomanic peak | SADS |
| [ | Gerstein (2011) | 112 | BP-I, BP-II, or cyclothymic | 19.66 (1.83) | 3 years | Life events | LES and LEI | Change in symptom severity every 4 months | SADS |
| [ | Staufenbiel et al. (2014) | 71 | BP-I (54) BP II or BP NOS (17) | Med: 52 IQR: 43–62 | 3 months | Social support and life events | SSL and IRLE | Number and severity of symptoms across visits | YMRS |
| [ | Sylvia et al. (2009) | 101 | BP-II (64) Cyclothymic (37) | 19.8 (1.8) | 1 year | Sleep loss | LES | Change in symptom severity at every 4-month follow-up | SADS |
BIS/BAS, Behavioral Inhibition System/Behavioral Activation System Scale; BP, bipolar disorder; BRMS, Bech-Rafaelsen Mania Rating Scale; CFI, Camberwell Family Interview; DSM, Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders; FACES-II, The Family Adaptability and Cohesion Evaluation Scale-II; FAD, Family Assessment Device; FMSS, The Five-Minute Speech Sample; IRLE, Interview for Recent Life Events; ISEL, Support Evaluation List; ISSI, Interview Schedule for Social Interaction; LEDS, Bedford College Life Events and Difficulties Schedule; LEI, Life Events Interview; LES, Life Events Scale; LIFE, Longitudinal Interval Follow-Up Evaluation; M-CIDI, Munich-Composite International Diagnostic Interview; PCS, Perceived Criticism Scale; PSS, Psychosocial Schedule for School-Age Children—Revised; SADS, Schedule for Affective Disorders and Schizophrenia; SAS, Social Adjustment Scale; SCID, Structured Clinical Interview for DSM Disorders; SRMI, Self-Report Mania Inventory; SSIAM, Structured and Scaled Interview to Assess Maladjustment; SSL, The Social Support List; TES, Trauma Events Screen; UCLA ESI, Episodic Stress Interview; YMRS, Young Mania Rating Scale
| Section/topic | # | Checklist item | Location(s) reported |
|---|---|---|---|
| Database name | 1 | Name each individual database searched, stating the platform for each | PsycINFO |
| Multi-database searching | 2 | If databases were searched simultaneously on a single platform, state the name of the platform, listing all of the databases searched | N/A |
| Study registries | 3 | List any study registries searched | N/A |
| Online resources and browsing | 4 | Describe any online or print source purposefully searched or browsed (e.g., tables of contents, print conference proceedings, web sites), and how this was done | N/A |
| Citation searching | 5 | Indicate whether cited references or citing references were examined, and describe any methods used for locating cited/citing references (e.g., browsing reference lists, using a citation index, setting up email alerts for references citing included studies) | Cited references were examined for relevant work to be included in the review. Email alerts were also enabled for new studies referencing cited work |
| Contacts | 6 | Indicate whether additional studies or data were sought by contacting authors, experts, manufacturers, or others | Authors of previous work were contacted to request relevant articles |
| Other methods | 7 | Describe any additional information sources or search methods used | Previous reviews of social factors related to mania were examined for key empirical work to be included |
| Full search strategies | 8 | Include the search strategies for each database and information source, copied and pasted exactly as run | The following queries were performed within PsycINFO Primary search query: FIELD 1: Life events OR social support OR trauma OR violence OR family OR interpersonal OR environmental OR stress OR victimization OR expressed emotion OR marital satisfaction OR adversity OR life stress OR perceived criticism OR family interaction FIELD 2: Mania OR Manic We subsequently conducted a search using FIELD 1 and setting the second search query to “hypomania” OR “hypomanic” |
| Limits and restrictions | 9 | Specify that no limits were used, or describe any limits or restrictions applied to a search (e.g., date or time period, language, study design) and provide justification for their use | Search was restricted to longitudinal prospective human studies as this was the focus of our review |
| Search filters | 10 | Indicate whether published search filters were used (as originally designed or modified), and if so, cite the filter(s) used | N/A |
| Prior work | 11 | Indicate when search strategies from other literature reviews were adapted or reused for a substantive part or all of the search, citing the previous review(s) | Five review chapters were examined for integration with the present review [ |
| Updates | 12 | Report the methods used to update the search(es) (e.g., rerunning searches, email alerts) | Searches were rerun biweekly and email updates were configured for new articles matching the specified search criteria |
| Dates of searches | 13 | For each search strategy, provide the date when the last search occurred | The last primary search occurred 12/28/21. Authors of previous work were contacted 11/11/2021 |
| Peer review | 14 | Describe any search peer review process | B. W. and an assistant reviewed all search results and then S. J. reviewed results. Any uncertainties were discussed between B. W. and S. J |
| Total Records | 15 | Document the total number of records identified from each database and other information sources | 8 articles were received from authors who previously published work on social factors in bipolar disorder. Our initial PsycINFO search for articles published in or after 2014 produced 440 records for mania and 37 for hypomania. 96 articles were identified preceding 2014 for both mania and hypomania. After manually removing records that did not use longitudinal methods or have direct relevance to social environmental predictors of mania, 53 articles were identified for more systematic review. After the more careful review, 30 articles were identified as longitudinally using social variables to predict mania parameters |
| Deduplication | 16 | Describe the processes and any software used to deduplicate records from multiple database searches and other information sources | As PsycINFO was the only database used, no deduplication was necessary |