학술논문

The relationship between attention deficit hyperactivity disorder, bipolarity and mixed features in major depressive patients: Evidence from the BRIDGE-II-Mix Study.
Document Type
Journal Article
Source
Journal of Affective Disorders. Mar2019, Vol. 246, p346-354. 9p.
Subject
*BORDERLINE personality disorder
*HYPOMANIA
*ATTENTION-deficit hyperactivity disorder
*ANTIDEPRESSANTS
*ALEXITHYMIA
*COMPARATIVE studies
*MENTAL depression
*FAMILIES
*LONGITUDINAL method
*RESEARCH methodology
*BIPOLAR disorder
*MEDICAL cooperation
*RESEARCH
*EVALUATION research
*ANXIETY disorders
*CROSS-sectional method
*DISEASE complications
*PSYCHOLOGY
Language
ISSN
0165-0327
Abstract
Objective: This study primarily focused on the relationship between comorbid attention deficit-hyperactivity disorder (ADHD), mixed features and bipolarity in major depressive patients.Methods: The sample comprised 2777 patients with Major Depressive Episode (MDE) enrolled in a multicentre, multinational study originally designed to assess different definitions of mixed depression. Socio-demographic, familial and clinical characteristics were compared in patients with (ADHD + ) and without (ADHD-) comorbid ADHD.Results: Sixty-one patients (2.2%) met criteria for ADHD. ADHD was associated with a higher number of (hypo)manic symptoms during depression. Mixed depression was more represented in ADHD + patients than in ADHD- using both DSM-5 and experimental criteria. Differences were maintained after removing overlapping symptoms between (hypo)mania and ADHD. ADHD in MDE was also associated with a variety of clinical and course features such as onset before the age of 20, first-degree family history of (hypo)mania, past history of antidepressant-induced (hypo)manic switches, higher number of depressive and affective episodes, atypical depressive features, higher rates of bipolarity specifier, psychiatric comorbidities with eating, anxiety and borderline personality disorders.Limitations: The study was primarily designed to address mixed features in ADHD, with slightly reduced sensitivity to the diagnosis of ADHD. Other possible diagnostic biases due to heterogeneity of participating clinicians.Conclusions: In a sample of major depressive patients, the comorbid diagnosis of current ADHD is associated with bipolar diathesis, mixed features, multiple psychiatric comorbidity and a more unstable course. Further prospective studies are necessary to confirm the possible mediating role of temperamental mood instability and emotional dysregulation in such a complex clinical presentation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]