• La Revue du praticien · Mar 2005

    Review

    [Bipolar disorders and psychiatric comorbidity].

    • Héloise Lipski and Franck Baylé.
    • Laboratoire Vulnérabilité, Adaptation et Psychopathologie, CNRS UMR 7593, Groupe Hospitalier La Pitie-La Salpêtrière, 75651 Paris. heloiselipski@yahoo.fr
    • Rev Prat. 2005 Mar 15; 55 (5): 501-6.

    AbstractComorbidity is very frequent in bipolar disorders. The most frequently psychiatric disorders associated with bipolar disorders are substance use disorders (particularly alcohol abuse) and anxiety disorders. Obsessive-compulsive disorder, impulse control disorders, personality disorders and eating disorders co-occur also with bipolar disorder. Comorbidity complicates the diagnosis and the treatment of bipolar disorder and worsen the prognosis. For every bipolar patient, it is necessary to search for a comorbid psychiatric disorder, and vice-versa. There is a noticeable paucity of controlled studies to guide selection of the most effective treatment approches for these patients. The expert consensus guidelines about treatment of bipolar disorder propose divalproex as first-line treatment when bipolar disorder co-occurres with substance abuse, panic disorder or posttraumatic stress disorder.

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