Daniel Smith is a clinical lecturer in the Department of Psychological Medicine at Cardiff University (Henry Wellcome Building for Biomedical Research, Academic Avenue, Heath Park, Cardiff CF14 4XN, UK. E-mail: djsmith1999{at}hotmail.com). He has research interests in the classification and genetics of bipolar disorder. Nassir Ghaemi is Associate Professor of Psychiatry and Public Health and Director of the Bipolar Disorders Research Program at Emory University, in the US state of Georgia. He has published widely on nosological and treatment aspects of bipolar disorder.
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When youre high its tremendous. The ideas and feelings are fast and frequent ... Shyness goes, the right words and gestures are suddenly there, the power to captivate others a felt certainty ... Sensuality is pervasive and the desire to seduce and be seduced irresistible (Jamison, 1995: p. 67).In hypomania, there is an increased pressure of speech with prolixity, an abnormal liveliness of expressive movements, superficial bustling activity and a tendency to be argumentative and irritable if thwarted in any way. The patient is interested in everything, starts many projects, and finishes none ... the elated mood leads to faulty judgement and a lack of consideration for others ... hypersexuality may lead to venereal disease in men and pregnancy in women ... the mental illness may be obvious only to the relatives and doctors, and other outside observers may merely regard the patient as a cheerful chap or somewhat of a "card" (Fish, quoted by Hamilton, 1974: p. 73).
Although Kay Jamisons evocative description of the early stages of mania contrasts with the phenomenological account provided by Frank Fish (writing in the 1960s), these two quotations illustrate a fundamental point about the presentation and diagnosis of hypomanic states. People with mild manic symptoms rarely complain about feeling unwell (indeed, many enjoy their supernormal levels of functioning), whereas family members and psychiatrists will usually be quick to recognise the behavioural manifestations of the illness. In this review, we focus on some of the recent advances in our understanding of the presentation and detection of hypomania.
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Categories v. dimensions
Many of the diagnoses used in psychiatry, including those described in ICD10 (World Health Organization, 1992) and DSMIV (American Psychiatric Association, 1994), are categorical in nature and based on a checklist approach that specifies an arbitrary number of symptoms as a threshold for diagnosis. Although these classifications have been of considerable value, they fail to reflect the clinical reality that psychiatric presentations are often dimensional rather than all-or-nothing phenomena.
For mood disorders, one of the consequences of this has been the proliferation of a large collection of diagnoses, ranging from major (unipolar) depression through to severe psychotic disorders such as schizoaffective disorder. Not surprisingly, the dividing line between what might be considered normal temperament and full-blown mood disorder can often appear blurred. A good illustration of this is the retention of sub-threshold disorders such as dysthymia and cyclothymia in ICD10 and DSMIV. For bipolar disorder, the accurate detection of hypomania is of pivotal diagnostic importance and has considerable implications for treatment.
What is the correct definition of hypomania?
Although ICD10 and DSMIV are generally in agreement over what constitutes a core manic symptom, there are important differences in the guidance that they provide for the diagnosis of hypomania. In ICD10, hypomania is considered to be a lesser degree of mania lasting several days and causing considerable interference with work or social activity. In contrast, DSMIV stipulates that hypomania occurs without [my italics] marked social or occupational dysfunction (leading to a diagnosis of bipolar II disorder). Full-blown mania in DSMIV refers to any persistent elevation of mood lasting more than 1 week that causes functional impairment (and leads to a diagnosis of bipolar I disorder).
Thus, many patients with ICD10-defined hypomania may actually satisfy DSMIV criteria for mania. This confusion is compounded in the UK by an apparent overuse of the term hypomania. It is not uncommon for a patient who has been hospitalised for weeks with severe mania to be given a discharge diagnosis of hypomania (Goodwin, 2002).
Some of the core manic symptoms of hypomania may be more common than others. For example, increased activity and increased energy are almost universal, whereas increased talkativeness does not feature in over a quarter of hypomanic presentations (Fig. 1
) (Wicki & Ansgt, 1991).
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Fig. 1 Frequency of core manic symptoms in hypomania (data from Wicki & Angst, 1991).
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Dysphoric (or mixed) hypomania
The traditional view of hypomania as a predominantly euphoric mental state is challenged by recent studies. Many people with bipolar disorder experience dysphoric or mixed hypomanic periods that can be diagnostically challenging (Akiskal et al, 2003a). Some studies have estimated that at least half of all mood episodes in bipolar disorder are mixed presentations (Cassidy & Carroll, 2001).
In a recent 7-year naturalistic study of 908 people with bipolar disorder within the Stanley Bipolar Treatment Network, Suppes et al(2005) found that out of 1044 visits in which the patients met DSMIV criteria for hypomania, in 57% of cases they also met criteria for mixed hypomania (defined as a Young Mania Rating Scale score
12 and an Inventory of Depressive Symptomatology score
15). Mixed hypomania was much more likely in women than in men, supporting previous findigns of an overrepresentation of mixed states in female patients with bipolar disorder (Arnold et al, 2000; Benazzi, 2003).
Differential diagnosis of hypomania
The diagnosis of hypomania can also be more difficult because hypomanic symptoms can feature prominently in a number of other conditions. A commonly encountered difficulty is the differentiation of hypomania from periods of elevated mood, overactivity and grandiosity that can occur in individuals with extrovert or cyclothymic personalities. Similarly, people with DSMIV cluster B personality disorders (particularly borderline personality disorder) who do not have a mood disorder can present with high levels of affective arousal that can mimic hypomania. Diagnosis in these patients is often made even more difficult by their concurrent use of drugs such as cannabis, amphetamine and cocaine.
Leaving aside concerns about the clinical validity of a diagnosis of adult attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) (Asherson, 2004; Zwi & York, 2004), some individuals presenting with hyperactivity, disinhibition and inattention may be misdiagnosed as being hypomanic. However, the differentiation of ADHD from hypomania should usually be straightforward if based on a systematic assessment for other hypomanic features such as elevated or irritable mood, inflated self-esteem and decreased need for sleep.
As with all psychiatric diagnoses, care should be taken to eliminate a clear organic cause for hypomanic symptoms, such as the use of stimulant drugs or an endocrine abnormality like hyperthyroidism. Box 1
shows the most common differential diagnoses for hypomania. A key issue in its differential diagnosis is that the psychiatric assessment should focus not only on the present mental state but also on the longitudinal history and temporal pattern of recurrent mood episodes (be they depressive, manic or mixed).
Box 1 Differential diagnosis of hypomania
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Using the Zurich cohort of 4547 young adults, who were formally assessed six times between 1978 and 1999, Angst et al(2003) tested the diagnostic criteria of DSMIV hypomania and attempted to develop and validate criteria for softer expressions of bipolar II disorder. They used the standard DSMIV definition of hypomania in addition to Zurich strict and Zurich broad criteria (Box 2
). They found the prevalence of bipolar II disorder to be 2% under DSMIV criteria, 5% under Zurich strict criteria and 11% under Zurich broad criteria. Interestingly, the clinical validity of diagnoses using both sets of Zurich criteria was supported by data on family history, illness course and clinical characteristics. Under the Zurich broad criteria, up to half of those with recurrent major depression in this cohort could be considered to have bipolar II disorder.
| Box 2 The Zurich criteria for hypomania Strict criteria
Broad criteria
(Angst et al, 2003, with permission)
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Several additional reports support a higher prevalence and clinically significant spectrum of bipolar disorders (Angst, 1998; Akiskal et al, 2000; Judd et al, 2003). For example, when people with a diagnosis of recurrent major depression are systematically assessed for a past history of hypomanic symptoms, 45% satisfy the diagnostic criteria for a bipolar disorder, suggesting that the detection of hypomania in everyday practice is deficient, even when using criteria that are overly restrictive (Allilaire et al, 2001).
Although the concept of a broadened bipolar spectrum has gained some prominence in recent years, it must be noted that this area remains controversial. Baldessarini (2000) has argued that classic bipolar disorder is probably as close to a disease as we have in modern psychiatry and that widespread acceptance of broadened definitions of bipolarity run the risk of trivialising the core concept. This view has important implications for biological research into bipolar (and unipolar) disorder, including neuropsychological, imaging and genetic studies. It would also affect the future design of treatment trials for depression and bipolar disorder. If one accepts that a proportion of people with recurrent depression may indeed have a bipolar disorder (even if broadly defined), this raises the uncomfortable possibility that much of the data on the efficacy of antidepressants in unipolar depression may have been derived from clinical populations that contain a significant proportion of people with bipolar depression.
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Depression dominates the natural history of bipolar II disorder
Bipolar disorder is characterised by oscillations between depression and hypomania and/or mania. For many years it was believed that mood symptoms and levels of functioning returned to normal between episodes of illness, but recent work has challenged this idea. Long-term follow-up studies of the symptomatic status of people with bipolar disorder have demonstrated that clinically relevant symptoms are extremely common and can have a major impact on psychosocial functioning.
Judd et al(2003) prospectively followed 86 individuals with bipolar II disorder for a mean duration of 13.4 years and found that depressive symptoms were reported in 50.3% of the weeks studied. Hypomanic symptoms were reported in only 3.6% of the weeks studied. In a similar study of 146 people with bipolar I disorder followed over 12.8 years, individuals were symptomatic for 47% of the study time (Judd et al, 2002). As with bipolar II disorder, depressive symptoms predominated over manic or hypomanic symptoms (31.9% v. 14.8% of total follow-up weeks) (Judd et al, 2002). The clinical course of bipolar disorders is therefore dominated by depression rather than hypomania. This is especially true for bipolar II disorder, where the ratio of time spent with depressive symptoms relative to time with hypomanic symptoms is about 30:1 (Judd et al, 2003).
People tend to seek help only for depressive episodes
Traditionally, we have been trained to diagnose bipolar disorder on the basis of manic presentations against a background of recurrent depression rather than taking into account other, more subtle clinical variables. Unsurprisingly, most people with bipolar disorder do not seek help during hypomanic periods. As a result, both primary care physicians and psychiatrists usually come into contact with them only during depressive episodes. Furthermore, patients recollection of previous hypomanic symptoms at this time is often poor. Depressive cognitive distortions tend to make their recall of elevated periods less likely and some patients may consciously (and unconsciously) withhold information about hypomanic symptoms, for example because of a reluctance to take mood-stabilising medication. Most clinicians are also much better at assessing depressive symptoms than hypomanic symptoms (Sprock, 1988).
The individuals lack of insight during hypomanic and manic episodes is a major factor in the under-detection of bipolar disorder. Although impaired insight is well documented as a core feature of psychosis, it has been much less studied in mood disorders. Insight has been shown to be significantly more impaired during hypomania and mania than during depression, and impaired insight appears to be almost as prominent a feature in mania as in psychosis (Ghaemi et al, 1995). A meta-analysis of studies found that impaired insight is a state-dependent feature of mania and should probably, as with psychosis, form part of the diagnostic picture (Ghaemi & Rosenquist, 2004).
For these reasons, it is essential that a corroborative history be obtained from a first-degree relative, partner or close friend during any assessment of possible bipolar disorder. Including family members in the assessment significantly increases the detection rate of bipolar disorder. In a study of the prodromal features of depression and mania, families reported behavioural manifestations of mania more than twice as frequently as patients (47% v. 22%) (Keitner et al, 1996). In our own clinical experience, we often observe a striking disparity between the account of hypomanic features provided by patients and by their close relatives.
Although this kind of assessment may be time-consuming, it can significantly alter the long-term prognosis for many patients. Clinicians time can be saved by a brief informative telephone call to a family member rather than hours of inaccurate or evasive interviews with the patient. Involving family members in assessment also has a number of less obvious advantages. It may bring to light a previously unknown family history of bipolar disorder or psychosis and can help some patients to engage more fully in their treatment plans.
Bipolar depression may differ from unipolar depression
A more systematic search for previous symptoms of hypomania may be prompted by a clinical suspicion that a depressed patient is presenting with bipolar rather than unipolar depression. Although it is widely held that people with bipolar depression are indistinguishable on clinical grounds from those with unipolar depression, a number of recent studies challenge this idea.
In a 3-year prospective follow-up study of 206 consecutive out-patients with depression and no prior history of bipolar disorder, 41 (20%) developed an episode of mania (Akiskal et al, 1983). Several variables were associated with bipolar outcome: depressive episodes of acute onset, frequent recurrence and brief duration; a family history of bipolar disorder; post-partum depression; psychomotor retardation or atypical features; and antidepressant-associated hypomania. The strongest associations with bipolar outcome were a family history of bipolar disorder and antidepressant-associated hypomania, with positive predictive values of 94% and 100% respectively (Akiskal et al, 1983).
In a small study of 27 individuals with unipolar depression and 27 age- and gender-matched people with bipolar depression, Mitchell et al(1992) found that those with bipolar depression tended to exhibit less psychomotor slowing, more agitation, more atypical symptoms and had shorter depressive episodes. Atypical depressive features (including mood reactivity, overeating, oversleeping, excessive fatigue, so-called leaden paralysis in the limbs and sensitivity to interpersonal rejection) appear to be at least twice as common in bipolar as in unipolar depression (Angst et al, 2005).
A comparison of 39 depressed patients with bipolar I disorder with age- and gender-matched depressed patients with unipolar depression found that the former were significantly more likely to have experienced an episode of psychotic depression in the past (Mitchell et al, 2001). Goldberg et al(2001) conducted a 15-year follow-up of 74 young adults hospitalised for severe unipolar depression and found that 27% subsequently developed hypomania, with an additional 19% experiencing at least one episode of full-blown mania. The presence of mood-congruent psychotic symptoms during the index depressive episode was strongly predictive of bipolar disorder, with 8 out of 10 patients with psychotic depression eventually becoming bipolar during the 15-year follow-up period.
A number of other variables have been associated with bipolar outcome in those with apparent unipolar disorder, although the evidence for these is weaker. These include hyperthymic personality, which in some studies (Akiskal et al, 2000) but not in others (Cassano et al, 1999) has been associated with a family history of bipolar disorder. Studies of the natural history of mood disorders suggest that bipolar depressive episodes tend to be shorter than unipolar depressive episodes (with a median duration of 36 months compared with 612 months) (Goodwin & Jamison, 1990). Acute but not prophylactic response to antidepressants (often referred to as antidepressant wear-off) and a history of non-response to multiple courses of antidepressants might also be predictive of bipolar outcome (Goodwin & Jamison, 1990). Possible indicators of bipolarity in apparently unipolar depression are listed in Box 3
.
Box 3 Indicators of bipolarity in apparently unipolar depression
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The bipolar nature of depressive mixed states
As noted above, the apparent bipolarity of mood episodes in bipolar disorder (a clear manic pole v. a clear depressive pole) may be a reflection of different proportions of manic and depressive symptoms within any given episode, rather than the occurrence of discrete pure manic and pure depressive episodes. Just as depressive symptoms occur during hypomanic periods of bipolar disorder, so hypomanic symptoms seem to occur during depressive episodes of the disorder.
In a cross-sectional analysis of both depressive and manic symptoms in a treated sample of 441 people with bipolar disorder, Bauer et al(2005) found that 68 (15.4%) met DSMIV criteria for a current hypomanic or manic episode and that most of these (64/68, 94.1%) also had clinically significant depressive symptoms.
This idea that mood episodes in bipolar disorder can often present as admixtures of depressive and hypomanic symptoms is supported by evidence that mixed depression may represent a clinical marker for bipolar disorder. In a consecutive sample of 226 individuals with bipolar II disorder and 151 with unipolar depression, Akiskal & Benazzi (2003) assessed the prevalence of mixed depression during an index depressive episode. They defined mixed depression as DSMIV major depression plus three or more concurrent hypomanic symptoms. Mixed depression was present in 58.4% of those in the bipolar II group and in 23.1% of those in the unipolar group. Those with mixed depression in the two groups shared similar clinical variables such as age at illness onset, atypical features and family history of bipolar disorder, suggesting that they might have a bipolar-spectrum disorder.
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This is a difficult area because many of the original descriptions of antidepressant-induced hypomania did not distinguish between patients with pre-existing diagnoses of unipolar or bipolar disorder. In addition, most treatment trials of antidepressants for depression do not systematically assess patients for hypomanic symptoms during the recovery period. To address these deficiencies, Chun & Dunner (2004) reviewed 98 trials of antidepressants for depression where a systematic effort was made to separate participants with bipolar or unipolar disorder. Most of these studies (89%) reported no cases of antidepressant-associated hypomania or mania, suggesting that antidepressants do not make individuals with correctly diagnosed unipolar disorder bipolar. In other words, when hypomania occurs as an adverse event following antidepressant therapy, it is because the patient has bipolar disorder. This is supported by evidence that individuals with unipolar depression who have antidepressant-associated hypomania and individuals with bipolar disorder who experience spontaneous hypomanias have very similar rates of mania in their family histories (Akiskal et al, 2003b).
The issue of whether antidepressants are helpful in both the short and long term in the treatment of bipolar depression is unresolved. In a recent meta-analysis of the short-term outcome of antidepressant treatment for bipolar depression, Gijsman et al(2004) found that antidepressants were effective in resolving depressive symptoms and did not appear to lead to more manic switches than did placebo. Conversely, in a literature review of hypomania or mania associated with recent antidepressant use in bipolar disorder, Goldberg & Truman (2003) concluded that between 20% and 40% of all people with bipolar disorder were inherently susceptible to antidepressant-induced manias. They found this to apply to all classes of antidepressant, although selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs) may be less likely to cause hypomania or mania in bipolar disorder than are tricyclics or dual-action antidepressants such as venlafaxine.
It is likely that bipolar disorder represents a collection of heterogeneous disorders, some of which may be more sensitive to antidepressant-induced switching than others (Wehr et al, 1988). It also seems likely that a minority of people with bipolar disorder will require longer-term antidepressant therapy in combination with mood stabilisers to protect against depressive relapse (Altshuler et al, 2003).
Goldberg & Truman (2003) have suggested that factors such as a strong genetic loading for bipolar illness, an early onset of illness, a history of multiple previous antidepressant trials and a history of antidepressant-induced manias should signal caution in the use of antidepressants for bipolar depression.
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In the USA, McElroy et al(2001) evaluated 288 out-patients with bipolar disorder and found that 187 (65%) also met DSMIV criteria for at least one comorbid lifetime Axis I disorder, the most common being substance misuse (n = 78, 42%). Alcohol misuse was present in 96 individuals (33% of the total sample). There were also significant levels of marijuana (16%), cocaine (9%), stimulant drug (9%), sedative drug (8%) and opiate (7%) misuse. Anxiety disorders were very common: 20% of the sample had a lifetime history of panic disorder; 16% social phobia; 9% obsessivecompulsive disorder; and 6% had a history of eating disorder. Current Axis I comorbidity was associated with an earlier age at onset of affective symptoms and the development of both cycle acceleration and more severe episodes over time.
DSMIV Axis II comorbidity is also common in bipolar disorder and may exert an even greater influence on misdiagnosis and prognosis. Around one-third of people with bipolar disorder have a comorbid diagnosis of at least one personality disorder, and by far the most common of these is borderline personality disorder (Vieta & Colom, 1999; Benazzi, 2000; Joyce et al, 2004). As many clinicians will recognise, mood episodes and affective instability are extremely common in borderline personality disorder. When individuals with borderline personality disorder are systematically assessed for the presence of bipolar features, rates of previously undiagnosed bipolarity of up to 69% have been reported (Deltito et al, 2001).
Although the relationship between bipolarity and borderline pathology is undoubtedly complex (for a review of this area see Paris, 2004, and Smith et al, 2004), many people with a diagnosis of borderline personality disorder may in fact have an undiagnosed bipolar-spectrum disorder and, as a result, may be denied effective treatments for their mood disorder. Conversely, some patients diagnosed with bipolar disorder will inevitably be more appropriately managed as patients with a borderline personality disorder (Bolton & Gunderson, 1996).
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Box 4 Simple ways of improving the detection of bipolar disorder
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Diagnostic criteria for bipolar-spectrum disorder
One of us (S.N.G.) with colleagues has suggested structured diagnostic criteria for bipolar-spectrum disorder that describe patients who do not meet the strict DSMIV criteria for bipolar disorder but who none the less have a number of important bipolar features (Ghaemi et al, 2001). These criteria, shown in Box 5
, give priority to a first-degree family history of bipolar disorder and a personal history of antidepressant-associated hypomania (Ghaemi et al, 2004). They also suggest that clustering of more subtle bipolar features may be used to aid diagnosis.
Box 5 Proposed diagnostic criteria for bipolar-spectrum disorder
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The Mood Disorder Questionnaire
The Mood Disorder Questionnaire (MDQ) is perhaps the best known screening instrument for bipolar disorder (Hirschfeld et al, 2000; available to patients at http://www.bipolar.com/mdq.htm). It is a brief form filled in by patients that can be easily incorporated into routine practice. In psychiatric out-patient settings, a positive response to 7 of the 13 core manic symptom questions (all occurring at the same time and associated with at least minor functional impairment) gives a sensitivity for bipolar disorder of 0.73 and a specificity of 0.90 (Hirschfeld et al, 2000).
However, in general population settings this instrument has a much lower sensitivity, of only 0.28, and a specificity of 0.97 (Hirschfeld et al, 2003). Miller et al(2002) tested the sensitivity of the MDQ in a population of individuals with bipolar disorder and found that it was much better at detecting bipolar I disorder (with a sensitivity of 0.70) than bipolar II disorder (sensitivity 0.30). Despite this, in the clinical setting, many psychiatrists have found the MDQ to be useful in the overall assessment of bipolar features.
(From Ghaemi et al, 2001, with permission)
The Bipolar Spectrum Diagnostic Scale
The Bipolar Spectrum Diagnostic Scale (BSDS) is a narrative-based scale that has been developed to target symptoms of bipolar II disorder (Ghaemi et al, 2005). As it is a relatively little-known instrument we show it in Box 6
. With a team of colleagues one of us (S.N.G.) compared the sensitivity and specificity of this scale with those of the MDQ for 73 people with bipolar disorder and 20 with unipolar depression (Ghaemi et al, 2005). We found the MDQ to be better at correctly detecting bipolar I than bipolar II disorder (confirming Miller et als findings mentioned earlier), whereas the BSDS was just as good at identifying both bipolar I and bipolar II disorder. This suggests that the BSDS may be particularly useful at detecting the broader spectrum of bipolar disorders.
| Box 6 The Bipolar Spectrum Diagnostic Scale (BSDS) (after Ghaemi et al, 2005, with permission) Instructions First, please read through the passages below, without filling in any blanks. Then read them again and put a tick in the box at the end of any sentences that you think fit you. Finally, tick one of the four boxes at the end of the passages.
Some individuals notice that their mood and/or energy levels shift drastically from time to time
During their low phases, these individuals often feel a lack of energy, a need to stay in bed or get extra sleep, and little or no motivation to do things they need to do
In between mood swings these individuals may experience a period of normal mood, during which their mood and energy level feel right and their ability to function is not disturbed
They may then notice a marked shift or switch in the way they feel Now that you have read the passages and ticked the boxes, please tick one of the following four boxes
Scoring the BSDS Each sentence ticked is worth 1 point. Add 6 points for fits me very well, 4 points for fits me fairly well and 2 points for fits me to some degree.
Optimum threshold for positive diagnosis: score of 13 or more.
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MCQ answers
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