Affective Illness in Children and Adolescents: Patterns of Presentation in Relation to Pubertal Maturation and Family History

Author:

Schraufnagel Caitlin Davies1,Brumback Roger A.2,Harper Caryn R.3,Weinberg Warren A.4

Affiliation:

1. Department of Neurology University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center, Dallas, TX, Department of Psychology University of North Texas, Denton, TX

2. Department of Pathology Creighton University School of Medicine, Omaha, NE

3. Department of Neurology University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center, Dallas, TX

4. Department of Neurology University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center, Dallas, TX, , Department of Pediatrics University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center, Dallas, TX, Pediatric Behavioral Neurology Program, Division of Pediatric Neurology Children's Medical Center of Dallas, Dallas, TX

Abstract

Affective illness is now recognized as a common problem in all age groups, and the various patterns have been well documented in adults. The objective of this study was to evaluate the patterns of affective illness in children and determine changes with increasing age and family history. One hundred children/adolescents with affective illness (72 boys and 28 girls; age range 2-20 years; mean age 10 years), who were consecutively referred to the Pediatric Behavioral Neurology Program, Children's Medical Center at Dallas, were evaluated for the pattern and course of affective illness symptoms, family history, and pubertal stage. Seven patterns of affective illness were identified. In the 65 prepubertal children (Tanner stage 1), disorders with hypomanic/manic symptomatology were most common (47/65, 72%): mania (2/65, 3%), hypomania (8/65, 12%), cyclothymia (11/65, 17%), juvenile rapid-cycling bipolar disorder/ultradian cycling bipolar disorder (8/65, 12%), and dysthymia with bipolar features (18/65, 28%). In contrast, the 26 fully pubertal adolescents (Tanner stages 3-5) had a predominance of patterns with only depressive symptomatology (16/26, 61%): dysthymia (4/26, 15%) and depression (12/26, 46%), along with juvenile rapid-cycling bipolar disorder/ultradian cycling bipolar disorder (6/26, 23%). Affective illness, alcoholism, and drug abuse were prominent in the family histories, regardless of the child's pattern of symptoms. Family histories of character disorder and Briquet's syndrome were also common, but thought disorder, suicide, and homicide were infrequent. This study supports the clinical observation that the presentation of affective illness changes with age: manic features predominate in younger children, whereas depressive symptomatology is more evident with pubertal maturation. (J Child Neurology 2001;16:553-561).

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Clinical Neurology,Pediatrics, Perinatology, and Child Health

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