Author:
Goodday Sarah Margaret,Preisig Martin,Gholamrezaee Mehdi,Grof Paul,Angst Jules,Duffy Anne
Abstract
BackgroundHypomanic symptoms may be a useful predictor of mood disorder among young people at high risk for bipolar disorder.AimsTo determine whether hypomanic symptoms differentiate offspring of parents with bipolar disorder (high risk) and offspring of well parents (control) and predict the development of mood episodes.MethodHigh-risk and control offspring were prospectively assessed using semi-structured clinical interviews annually and completed the Hypomania Checklist-32 Revised (HCL-32). Clinically significant sub-threshold hypomanic symptoms (CSHS) were coded.ResultsHCL-32 total and active or elated scores were higher in control compared with high-risk offspring, whereas 14% of high-risk and 0% of control offspring had CSHS. High-risk offspring with CSHS had a fivefold increased risk of developing recurrent major depression (P=0.0002). The median onset of CSHS in high-risk offspring was 16.4 (6–31) years and was before the onset of major mood episodes.ConclusionsCSHS are precursors to major mood episodes in high-risk offspring and could identify individuals at ultra-high risk for developing bipolar disorder.
Publisher
Royal College of Psychiatrists
Subject
Psychiatry and Mental health
Cited by
13 articles.
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