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Differentiating Bipolar Disorder-Not Otherwise Specified and Severe Mood Dysregulation

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
DOI: 10.1016/j.jaac.2013.02.006

Keywords

bipolar disorder; bipolar disorder not otherwise specified; severe mood dysregulation; irritability

Funding

  1. NIMH/National Institutes of Health
  2. NIMH
  3. Random House, Inc. (New Hope for Children and Teens with Bipolar Disorder)
  4. Lippincott Williams and Wilkins (Treating Child and Adolescent Depression)

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Objective: Bipolar disorder not otherwise specified (BP-NOS) and severe mood dysregulation (SMD) are severe mood disorders that were defined to address questions about the diagnosis of bipolar disorder (BD) in youth. SMD and BP-NOS are distinct phenotypes that differ in clinical presentation and longitudinal course. The purpose of this review is to inform clinicians about the clinical features of the two phenotypes and about the research literature distinguishing them. Method: A literature review was performed on SMD as studied in the National Institute of Mental Health Intramural Research Program and on BP-NOS in youth. For BP-NOS, the phenotype defined in the Course of Bipolar Youth study is the focus, because this has received the most study. Results: SMD is characterized by impairing, chronic irritability without distinct manic episodes. Most commonly, BP-NOS is characterized by manic, mixed, or hypomanic episodes that are too short to meet the DSM-IV-TR duration criterion. Research provides strong, albeit suggestive, evidence that SMD is not a form of BD; the most convincing evidence are longitudinal data indicating that youth with SMD are not at high risk to develop BD as they age. The BP-NOS phenotype appears to be on a diagnostic continuum with BD types I and II. Subjects with BP-NOS and those with BD type I have similar symptom and family history profiles, and youth with BP-NOS are at high risk to develop BD as they age. Currently, little research guides treatment for either phenotype. Conclusions: Pressing research needs include identifying effective treatments for these phenotypes, ascertaining biomarkers that predict conversion from BP-NOS to BD, elucidating associations between SMD and other disorders, and defining the neural circuitry mediating each condition. J. Am. Acad. Child Adolesc. Psychiatry, 2013;52(5):466-481.

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