The presence of a depressed or unpleasant mood during an episode of Mania produces a clinical picture called Dysphoric Mania.
Dysphoric features are statistically salient in patients with mania,
and the bimodal distribution of the dysphoria factor is consistent with
the possibility that mixed bipolar disorder is a distinct state.
Manic and depressed states are not mutually exclusive. Their
combination in mixed states has been repeatedly described since
Kraepelin. The mixed state, also called depressed or dysphoric mania,
is common, potentially severe, can be difficult to treat, and has the
potential to reveal much about the psychopathology and pathophysiology
of manic depressive illness. Yet, the lack of clear definition and
boundaries for mixed states hinders definitive research and clinical
work.
Most definitions of mixed states have relied on the application of
predetermined criteria for depressed symptoms or depressed syndromes to
groups of patients meeting diagnostic criteria for mania . These
definitions leave two basic problems unsolved:
1) whether there is a naturalistic division of manic episodes into
depressed and nondepressed types, as opposed to a random or continuous
distribution of depressed symptoms across patients with manic episodes
and
2) the specificity of mixed states themselves - for example, whether there are distinct depressed and dysphoric manic states.
Criteria for Dysphoric Mania or Hypomania
- Full manic or hypomanic syndrome by DSM-III-R criteria
- Simultaneous presence of at least 3 associated depressive symptoms of major depression
It has been suggested that Dysphoric Mania may represent a more
severe form of Mania (progressing from Hypomania to Euphoric Mania and
to Dysphoric Mania). Others consider Dysphoric Mania a separate,
independent form of illness with characteristic clinical and therapeutic
features.
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