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Early and Late Onset Bipolar Disorders in Older Adults

Authors :
N. Zouari
J. Ben Thabet
Lobna Zouari
Mohamed Maâlej
M. Maâlej-Bouali
N. Charfi
N. Smaoui
Source :
European Psychiatry. 41:S211-S211
Publication Year :
2017
Publisher :
Cambridge University Press (CUP), 2017.

Abstract

IntroductionAge of onset of illness may be useful in explaining the heterogeneity among older bipolar patients.ObjectiveTo examine the relationship of age of onset with clinical, demographic and behavioral variables, in older patients with bipolar disorder.MethodsThis was a cross-sectional, descriptive and analytical study, including 24 patients suffering from bipolar disorders, aged 65 years or more and followed-up in outpatient psychiatry unit at Hedi Chaker university hospital in Sfax in Tunisia. We used a standardized questionnaire including socio-demographic, behavioral and clinical data. Age of onset was split at age 40 years into early-onset (< 40 years; n = 12) and late-onset (≥ 40 years; n = 12) groups.ResultsThe mean age for the entire sample was 68.95 years. The mean age of onset was 39.95 years. The majority (60%) of patients were diagnosed with bipolar I. Few meaningful differences emerged between early-onset and late-onset groups, except that tobacco use was significantly higher in the late-onset group (66.6% vs. 16.6%; P = 0.027). No significant differences between the early-onset and late-onset groups were seen on demographic variables, family history and number of medical diagnoses or presence of psychotic features.ConclusionOur study found few meaningful behavioral differences between early versus late age at onset in older adults with bipolar disorder.Disclosure of interestThe authors have not supplied their declaration of competing interest.

Details

ISSN :
17783585 and 09249338
Volume :
41
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
European Psychiatry
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........e8a3f2d06fd125dac5c8edaa95bbb328