Psychiatric Journals
Psychiatry
Become a Member Today!
Email
Password
Remember me
Forgot your Password?

Invite Code?


Article ID

Home
General Psychiatry
Messages
Conferences
Jobs
Newsletters
My Library
Topics in
Psychiatry
        Anxiety
        Child/Adolescent Psych
        Eating Disorders
        Economics of Medicine
        Geriatric Psych
        Mood Disorders
        Neuro/Psych Pharmacol
        Neuropsych Sciences
        Other Psychiatry
        Pain Management
        Personality Disorders
        Popular Press
        Psychotherapy/analysis
        Schizophrenia/Psychosis
        Substance Abuse
 
Help
Resource Center
RSS News Feeds
Send Newsletter
to a Friend
Top Ten Searches
post partum depression  post partum depression
ssri  ssri
pervasive developmental  pervasive developmental
adhd  adhd
alzheimer's  alzheimer's
nervosa  nervosa
ptsd  ptsd
bipolar  bipolar
personality  personality
methamphetamine  methamphetamine
 
Sponsor
MDLinx Email Article

To email this article, enter your own "From Email" address,
the recipient's "To Email" address, and click the "Send Email" button.
You may send to up to 5 email addresses.
*From Email:  
*To Email:  
To Email:  
To Email:  
To Email:  
To Email:  
Manic/Hypomanic Symptom Burden and Cardiovascular Mortality in Bipolar Disorder
Fiedorowicz JG et al. - Participants with bipolar I disorder may face a greater risk of cardiovascular mortality than those with bipolar II disorder. This difference in cardiovascular mortality risk may reflect manic/hypomanic symptom burden.

Methods
  • Participants with major affective disorders were recruited for the National Institute of Mental Health Collaborative Depression Study and followed prospectively for up to 25 years.
  • A total of 435 participants met the diagnostic criteria for bipolar I (n = 288) or bipolar II (n = 147) disorder based on Research Diagnostic Criteria at intake and measures of psychiatric symptoms during follow-up.
  • Diagnostic subtypes were contrasted by cardiovascular mortality risk using Cox proportional hazards regression.
  • Affective symptom burden (the proportion of time with clinically significant manic/hypomanic or depressive symptoms) and treatment exposure were additionally included in the models.

Results
  • Thirty-three participants died from cardiovascular causes.
  • Participants with bipolar I disorder had more than double the cardiovascular mortality risk of those with bipolar II disorder, after controlling for age and gender (hazard ratio = 2.35, 95% Confidence Interval = 1.04–5.33; p = .04).
  • The observed difference in cardiovascular mortality between these subtypes was at least partially confounded by the burden of clinically significant manic/hypomanic symptoms which predicted cardiovascular mortality independent of diagnosis, treatment exposure, age, gender, and cardiovascular risk factors at intake.
  • Selective serotonin uptake inhibitors seemed protective although they were introduced late in follow-up. Depressive symptom burden was not related to cardiovascular mortality.
[more...]
Sponsor

Read a Different Specialty

Psychiatric News
Allergy/Immunology
Anesthesiology
Cardiology
Dermatology
Drugs
Emergency Medicine
Endocrinology
ENT
Family Medicine
Gastroenterology
Hematology-Oncology
Infectious Disease
Internal Medicine
Nephrology
Neurology
OB/Gyn
Ophthalmology
Orthopedics
Pain
Pediatrics
Practice Management
Psychiatry
Pulmonology
Radiology
Rheumatology
Surgery
Urology

Psychiatric News Profession Index

Psychiatric News
Dentist
Hospital Administrator
Nurse
    Medical Students
Nurse Practitioner
Pharma/Drug Marketer
    Pharmacist
Physician Assistants
Article Search
Keyword:
Search:
Published within:
Sort By:
Date Relevance
    
Sponsor
About MDLinx  |  Contact  |  Advertise with MDLinx  |  Site Map  |  Privacy Policy  |  Terms of Use  |  Sign Up For Newsletters  |  Recommend this Site

English |  Español |  Français |  Deutsch |  中文 |  Руccкий |  Norsk |  Nederlands |  Português |  Italiano

©1999-2009 MDLinx, Inc.