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Psychopathology II: Common Mood Disorders

This article provides an overview of common mood disorders, including unipolar and bipolar disorders. It explores the symptoms, epidemiology, biology, and risk of suicide associated with these disorders. The article also discusses the social factors and course and outcome of mood disorders.

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Psychopathology II: Common Mood Disorders

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  1. Psychopathology II: Common Mood Disorders Michael Wilson, PhD University of Illinois Department of Psychology and University of Illinois College of Medicine

  2. A clinical vignette… A 24 year-old male is brought to the hospital by his family. He has only slept 3 hours a night for the last 3 days. The family tells you that he has recently withdrawn large sums of money from his savings account and gone on wild spending sprees. During the interview, he is very talkative and easily distracted. He tells you that he feels “on top of the world.” This patient is most likely to be suffering from: • dysthymic disorder • major depressive disorder • bipolar disorder • hypochondriasis • cyclothymic disorder

  3. Outline • What are unipolar mood disorders? • What are bipolar mood disorders? • Epidemiology of mood disorders • Biology of mood disorders • Risk of suicide

  4. Mood disorders • Everyone’s mood tends to rise & fall • sadness is a normal part of the human condition • very happy self-confident end = mania • very sad worthless end = depression • abnormal if people experience extremes, especially if not consistent with events

  5. Chart: Unipolar Mood Disorder

  6. Chart: Bipolar Mood Disorder

  7. Depressed Mood versus Major Depressive Disorder (MDD) • Feeling depressed is different from major depressive disorder!! • Major depressive disorder is more than just feeling depressed!! • Just feeling sad, even very sad, not sufficient for dx of major depressive disorder • Feeling sad is not even necessary for diagnosis of major depressive disorder • Severity, intensity, duration matter

  8. Signs and Symptoms of a Major Depressive Episode • Sad or empty feelings • Anhedonia– loss of interest or pleasure • Weight loss/gain or appetite increase/decrease • Insomnia or hypersomnia • Psychomotor agitation or retardation • Fatigue or loss of energy • Feelings of worthlessness or inappropriate guilt • Diminished ability to concentrate or indecisiveness • Suicidal ideation, plan or attempt Best known by the mnemonic: SIG E CAPS

  9. Criteria for Unipolar Mood Disorders

  10. Symptoms of Dysthymia • Depressed mood for most of the day on more days than not • Poor appetite or overeating • Insomnia or hypersomnia • Low energy or fatigue • Low self-esteem • Poor concentration or difficulty making decisions • Feelings of hopelessness

  11. Chart: Dysthymia

  12. Clinical Impairment in MDD and Dysthymia Clinical impairment • Occupationally • Socially • Other important areas

  13. Exclusion Criteria • Not due to a general medical condition (e.g., thyroid condition) • Not due to substance use (e.g., alcohol) • Not bereavement (it is considered normal to have some symptoms of depression after someone dies)

  14. Types of Mood Disorders

  15. Symptoms of a Manic Episode • Elevated mood • Irritable/angry mood • Inflated self-esteem or grandiosity • Decreased need for sleep • More talkative than usual or pressure to keep talking • Flight of ideas or racing thoughts • Distractibility • Increase in goal-directed activity or psychomotor agitation • Excessive involvement in pleasurable activities that have a high potential for painful consequences

  16. The Difference Between a Manic and a Hypomanic Episode

  17. Chart: Bipolar I Disorder

  18. Chart: Bipolar I Disorder

  19. Additional Criteria • As with unipolar mood disorders, must be clinical impairment or distress • The symptoms cannot be: • Due to a medical condition • Due to substance use

  20. Epidemiology of Mood Disorders by Gender: Lifetime Prevalence

  21. Gender & Depression • Why do almost twice as many women develop depression? • women experience more trauma • particularly sexual abuse • women have more chronic strains • poverty, harassment, etc. • with equal stressors, women still more likely to develop depression • biology, coping style

  22. Prevalence of Major Depressive Disorder by Employment

  23. Prevalence of Major Depressive Disorder by Income

  24. Course and Outcome: Major Depressive Disorder • Average age of onset is 23 for males and 25 for females • Minimum duration of at least 2 weeks but episodes could last much longer • Most people who have major depression will have at least 2 depressive episodes • MDD is frequently a chronic and recurrent condition • Half recover from their episode of major depression within 6 months. 40% of recovered people relapse within a year

  25. Course and Outcome: Bipolar Disorders • Onset is usually between ages 18-20 • Average manic episode 2-3 months, bipolar II patients (have hypomania) tend to have shorter and less severe episodes • Long-term course • Most will have more than one episode • Length of intervals between episodes varies and is difficult to predict • 40-50% of patients are able to achieve a sustained recovery; rapid cycling patients have a worse prognosis

  26. Etiology: Social Factors and Depression • Loss (of significant others, of social role, self-esteem, etc.) plays an important role in onset of depression • Social support or lack of social support is a risk factor for depression • and suicide

  27. Neurotransmitters & Depression • Neurotransmitters • Early theories about lack of serotonin probably overly simplistic • Multiple transmitters involved • including serotonin, NE, lesser extent dopamine • Interaction between neurotransmitters, genes, social stresses is important

  28. More neurotransmitters • Serotonin • converted from tryptophan in CNS • elevation causes improved mood, sleep, but decreased sexual function • decrease causes poor sleep, poor impulse control, depression

  29. More neurotransmitters • Norepinephrine • synthesized by noradrenergic neurons, mostly located in locus ceruleus • elevation causes increased mood, anxiety, arousal, learning

  30. More neurotransmitters • Dopamine • synthesized from tyrosine • involved in schizophrenia, psychosis, Parkinson’s, reward system • to a lesser extent mood disorders

  31. Antidepressants • Serotonin is a particularly important neurotransmitter for mood • Selective serotonoin reuptake inhhibitors (SSRIs) are effective • Stop reuptake of serotonin at synapses • TCAs are older drugs • mostly block NE and serotonin • also have anticholinergic effects • lots of side effects • fatal in overdose • MAOs • block dopamine reuptake • lots of side effects!

  32. Depression & Genetics • Unipolar depression concordance rates: MZ = .54, DZ = .24 • Bipolar disorder concordance rates MZ = .43, DZ = .06 • No strong evidence of a single gene responsible for mood disorders

  33. Suicide • Depression is a risk factor for suicide • 7.5-20 times more likely to commit suicide when have MDD • In 1 study*, 2.5 times more likely to commit suicide when in remission *Sokero et al (2005) British Journal of Psychiatry

  34. Suicide • Increased risk • previous suicidal behavior, family history, severe depression, substance use, poor physical health/perception of poor health, lack of social support • Reduced risk • suicidal gesture, no family history, mild depression, no substance use, good health, married, strong social support

  35. A clinical vignette… A 24 year-old male is brought to the hospital by his family. He has only slept 3 hours a night for the last 3 days. The family tells you that he has recently withdrawn large sums of money from his savings account and gone on wild spending sprees. During the interview, he is very talkative and easily distracted. He tells you that he feels “on top of the world.” This patient is most likely to be suffering from: • dysthymic disorder • major depressive disorder • bipolar disorder • hypochondriasis • cyclothymic disorder

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