The High Prevalence of "Soft" Bipolar (II) Features in Atypical
Depression.
Seventy-two percent of 86 major
depressive
patients with
atypical
features as defined by the DSM-IV and evaluated systematically were found to
meet our criteria for
bipolar
II and related "soft" bipolar disorders; nearly 60% had antecedent
cyclothymic or hyperthymic temperaments. The family history for bipolar
disorder validated these clinical findings. Even if we limit the diagnosis
of bipolar II to the official DSM-IV threshold of 4 days of hypomania, 32.6%
of atypical depressives in our sample would meet this conservative
threshold, a rate that is three times higher than the estimates of
bipolarity among atypical depressives in the literature. By definition, mood
reactivity was present in all patients, while interpersonal sensitivity
occurred in 94%. Lifetime comorbidity rates were as follows:
social
phobia 30%, body dysmorphic disorder 42%,
obsessive-compulsive disorder 20%, and
panic
disorder (agoraphobia)
64%. Both cluster A (anxious
personality) and cluster B (e.g.,
borderline and histrionic) personality disorders were highly prevalent.
..
These data suggest that the "atypicality" of depression is favored by
affective temperamental dysregulation and anxiety comorbidity, clinically
manifesting in a mood disorder subtype that is preponderantly in the realm
of bipolar II. In the present sample, only 28% were strictly unipolar and
characterized by avoidant and social phobic features, without histrionic
traits.
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