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Bipolar Disorder

Mental Health Services Research, 2002
Manic-depressive (bipolar) disorder is a severe, relapsing mental illness that shares characterstics both with major depressive disorder and with serious mental illnesses such as schizophrenia. Like schizophrenia, it is a chronic disorder, and is treated primarily in the specialty mental health sector. Rates of appropriate treatment are low. Functional
Mark, Bauer   +3 more
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BIPOLAR DISORDER

Medical Clinics of North America, 2001
Bipolar disorder (manic-depressive illness) is a common, recurrent, and severe psychiatric disorder that affects 1% to 3% of the US population. The illness is characterized by episodes of mania, depression, or mixed states (simultaneously occurring manic and depressive symptoms).
P E, Keck, S L, McElroy, L M, Arnold
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Bipolar Disorder

Annals of Internal Medicine, 2022
Bipolar disorder (BD) affects approximately 2% of U.S. adults and is the most costly mental health condition for commercial insurers nationwide. Rates of BD are elevated among persons with depression, anxiety disorders, and substance use disorders-conditions frequently seen by primary care clinicians.
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Bipolar disorders

The Lancet, 2020
Bipolar disorders are a complex group of severe and chronic disorders that includes bipolar I disorder, defined by the presence of a syndromal, manic episode, and bipolar II disorder, defined by the presence of a syndromal, hypomanic episode and a major depressive episode.
McIntyre, Roger S.   +13 more
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Poststroke Bipolar Disorder

Journal of Nervous & Mental Disease, 2021
Abstract Various diseases that impact different systems and organs in the body may trigger manic episodes. Strokes are often associated with psychiatric symptoms, particularly depressive and, more rarely, manic. We herein report a case of bipolar disorder secondary to cerebrovascular disease in a 67-year-old man with no personal or family ...
Rodrigo, Saraiva   +6 more
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Bipolar disorder

Nursing Standard, 2014
Essential facts. Bipolar disorder is a potentially lifelong and disabling condition. Bipolar I, characterised by episodes of mania and depression, is estimated to affect 1 per cent of the adult population. Bipolar II, characterised by hypomania and depression, affects an estimated 0.4 per cent of adults. Episodes can vary in length and frequency.
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Bipolar disorder

New Directions for Mental Health Services, 1992
AbstractThe etiology of bipolar disorder (BD) has a complex genetic component; juvenile‐ and adolescent‐onset BD may be expressing the most genotypically severe form of the illness.
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Elderly Bipolar Disorder

Current Psychiatry Reports, 2021
With more individuals reaching older ages, bipolar disorder is no longer a rare illness in the elderly. Despite the growing number of the older individuals with the illness, there are few studies that focus on bipolar disorder in the geriatric population leading to gaps in clinical knowledge and treatment. The aim of this study is therefore to increase
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Geriatric Bipolar Disorder

Psychiatric Clinics of North America, 2011
Because the elderly are the fastest growing segment of the population, the number of older adults with bipolar disorder is increasing. Geriatric bipolar disorder is relatively rare, with an estimated lifetime prevalence of 0.5% to 1%, although approximately 4% to 17% of older patients in clinical psychiatric settings have bipolar disorder.
Martha, Sajatovic, Peijun, Chen
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Risk and coaggregation of major psychiatric disorders among first-degree relatives of patients with bipolar disorder: a nationwide population-based study

Psychological Medicine, 2018
Background Bipolar disorder is a highly heritable mental illness that transmits intergeneratively. Previous studies supported that first-degree relatives (FDRs), such as parents, offspring, and siblings, of patients with bipolar disorder, had a higher ...
Mu-Hong Chen   +11 more
semanticscholar   +1 more source

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