1. Ten‐year course of treated bipolar I disorder: The role of polarity at onset
- Author
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María Yoldi‐Negrete, Ana Fresán‐Orellana, Mariana Jiménez‐Tirado, Sara Martínez‐Camarillo, Lino Palacios‐Cruz, Eduard Vieta, Hiram Ortega‐Ortiz, Claudia Becerra‐Palars, Doris Gutiérrez‐Mora, and Beatriz Camarena Medellín
- Subjects
psychiatric disorders ,psychiatry ,psychosis ,Neurosciences. Biological psychiatry. Neuropsychiatry ,RC321-571 - Abstract
Abstract Introduction Early‐stage predictors of illness course are needed in bipolar disorder (BD). Differences among patients with a first depressive versus maniac/hypomanic episode have been stated, although in most studies, memory bias and time from onset to start of specialized treatment might interfere. The aim was to compare the first 10 years of illness course according to polarity at onset. Methods 49 type I BD patients admitted for treatment for a first‐time affective episode and a following 10‐year attendance to the institution were included. A retrospective year by year comparison according to polarity at onset (depressive (DPO) or maniac (MPO)) was performed. Cramer's V and Cohen d were computed to determine effect size. Results 59.2% (n = 29) started with MPO. Both groups were similar in demographic and social outcome characteristics, clinical features, and treatment variables. Patients with DPO reported more depressive episodes than MPO patients (U = 149.0 p
- Published
- 2021
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