Author:
Corvin Aiden,O'Mahony Ed,O'Regan Myra,Comerford Claire,O'Connell Robert,Craddock Nick,Gill Michael
Abstract
BackgroundAn association exists between smoking and schizophrenia, independent of other factors and related to psychotic symptomatology.AimsTo determine whether smoking is associated with psychosis in bipolar affective disorder.MethodSmoking data were collected from 92 unrelated patients with bipolar affective disorder. An ordinal logistic regression analysis tested the relationship between smoking severity and psychotic symptomatology, allowing for potential confounders.ResultsA significant relationship was detected between smoking/heavy smoking and history of psychosis (68.7%, n=44). Smoking was less prevalent in patients who were less symptomatic (56.5%, n=13) than in patients with a more severe psychosis (75.7%, n=31). Prevalence and severity of smoking predicted severity of psychotic symptoms (P=0.001), a relationship independent of other variables (P=0.0272).ConclusionA link between smoking and psychosis exists in bipolar affective disorder and may be independent of categorical diagnosis.
Publisher
Royal College of Psychiatrists
Subject
Psychiatry and Mental health
Cited by
65 articles.
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