Background: Although eating disorders (EDs) are common in bipolar disorder (BD), little is known regarding their longitudinal consequences. We assessed prevalence, clinical correlates, and longitudinal depressive severity in BD patients with vs. without EDs.

Methods: Outpatients referred to Stanford University BD Clinic during 2000-2011 were assessed with the Systematic Treatment Enhancement Program for BD (STEP-BD) affective disorders evaluation, and while receiving naturalistic treatment for up to 2 years, were monitored with the STEP-BD clinical monitoring form. Patients with vs. without lifetime EDs were compared with respect to prevalence, demographic and unfavorable illness characteristics/current mood symptoms and psychotropic use, and longitudinal depressive severity.

Results: Among 503 BD outpatients, 76 (15.1%) had lifetime EDs, which were associated with female gender, and higher rates of lifetime comorbid anxiety, alcohol/substance use, and personality disorders, childhood BD onset, episode accumulation (≥10 prior mood episodes), prior suicide attempt, current syndromal/subsyndromal depression, sadness, anxiety, and antidepressant use, and earlier BD onset age, and greater current overall BD severity. Among currently depressed patients, 29 with compared to 124 without lifetime EDs had significantly delayed depressive recovery. In contrast, among currently recovered (euthymic ≥8 weeks) patients, 10 with compared to 95 without lifetime EDs had only non-significantly hastened depressive recurrence.

Limitations: Primarily Caucasian, insured, suburban, American specialty clinic-referred sample limits generalizability. Small number of recovered patients with EDs limited statistical power to detect relationships between EDs and depressive recurrence.

Conclusions: Further studies are warranted to explore the degree to which EDs impact longitudinal depressive illness burden in BD.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5554118PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s40345-017-0094-4DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

lifetime eds
16
longitudinal depressive
12
delayed depressive
8
depressive recovery
8
bipolar disorder
8
eds
8
patients compared
8
depressive
7
lifetime
6
patients
5

Similar Publications

Introduction: Accumulating research suggests both eating disorders (EDs) and internalizing disorders (e.g., anxiety, depression) are associated with gastrointestinal disease (e.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Crystal structure, bandgap, photoluminescence and resistivity properties of double perovskite CsAgBiCl single crystal and its thin film.

RSC Adv

November 2024

School of Chemistry and Chemical Engineering, Shandong Provincial Key Laboratory/Collaborative Innovation Center of Chemical Energy Storage, Liaocheng University China

Lead-free CsAgBiCl double perovskite (CsAgBiCl-DP) material, as a substitute for lead halide perovskite materials, has the advantages of environmental friendliness and high stability and has attracted much attention. However, the photoluminescence and conductive properties of CsAgBiCl-DP have not been well studied. In this study, we prepared CsAgBiCl-DP single crystals (SCs) by coordination-dissolution and coordination-precipitation method.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Achieving high photocatalytic NO removal activity using a Bi/BiOBr/TiO composite photocatalyst.

Chemosphere

November 2024

Department of Chemistry, Molecular Science Research Hub, 82 Wood Lane, White City Campus, Imperial College London, London, W12 0BZ, UK; London Centre for Nanotechnology, South Kensington Campus, Imperial College London, London, SW7 2AZ, UK. Electronic address:

Fossil fuel combustion generates nitrogen oxides (NO + NO = NO), which pose threats to the environment and human health. Although commercial products containing titanium dioxide (TiO) can remedy NO pollution by photocatalysis, they only function in the ultraviolet (UV). On the other hand, bismuth oxybromide (BiOBr) is active in the visible.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The surface composition and microstructure of an up to 5 µm thick multilayer on a knee implant were investigated. When the implant was explanted after approximately two years of clinical use due to failure from aseptic loosening, the topmost ZrN layer was found to be oxidized. Interestingly, only the non-articulating area was visibly oxidized (color change).

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!