Journal
ACTA PSYCHIATRICA SCANDINAVICA
Volume 129, Issue 1, Pages 4-16Publisher
WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/acps.12140
Keywords
affective disorders; antidepressives; bipolar disorder; depression
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ObjectiveTo review the DSM-5 proposed criteria for mixed depression in light of robust and consistent historical and scientific evidence. MethodAn extensive historical search, a systematic review of the papers used by DSM-5 as reference papers, and a PubMed search were performed. ResultsAs Hippocrates, depressive mixed states have been described as conditions of intense psychic suffering, consisting of depressed mood, inner tension, restlessness, and aimless psychomotor agitation. In DSM-5, new criteria are proposed for a mixed features specifier, as part of depression either in major depressive disorder (MDD) or bipolar disorder. Those criteria require, as diagnostically specific, manic/hypomanic symptoms that are the least common kinds of symptoms that actually arise in depressive mixed states. The DSM-5 proposal is based, almost entirely, on a speculative wish to avoid overlapping' manic and depressive symptoms. Mixed states are, in fact, nothing but overlapping manic and depressive symptoms. ConclusionIn this article, we review the psychopathology and research on mixed depressive states, and try to demonstrate that the DSM-5 proposal has weak scientific basis and does not identify a large number of mixed depressive states. This may be harmful because of the different treatment required by these conditions.
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