• J Affect Disord · Apr 2014

    Mixed state discrimination: a DSM problem that won׳t go away?

    • Gin S Malhi, Lisa Lampe, Carissa M Coulston, Michelle Tanious, Danielle M Bargh, Genevieve Curran, Sandy Kuiper, Hugh Morgan, and Kristina Fritz.
    • CADE Clinic, Department of Psychiatry, Royal North Shore Hospital, NSW, Australia; Discipline of Psychiatry, Sydney Medical School, University of Sydney, NSW, Australia. Electronic address: Gin.malhi@sydney.edu.au.
    • J Affect Disord. 2014 Apr 1; 158: 8-10.

    BackgroundDSM׳s replacement of 'mixed episodes' with 'mixed features' has ironically created a specifier, which potentially lacks specificity because it overlooks two key symptoms: psychomotor agitation and distractibility. Therefore, the present study examined the presence of psychomotor agitation and distractibility across the mood disorder spectrum.MethodsTwo hundred patients were diagnosed and assigned to one of three groups (depression, bipolar spectrum disorder (BDspectrum) and bipolar disorder) based on clinical evaluation by a psychiatrist. On the basis of MDQ scores, the depression group was then further subdivided into two groups: unipolar depression (UP) and mixed depression (UPmix). These four groups were then compared to examine the relative distribution of psychomotor agitation and distractibility. Participants underwent a clinical evaluation by a psychiatrist and completed a series of questionnaires.ResultsIncreased distraction, racing thoughts, and increased irritability were the most commonly reported manic symptoms amongst the unipolar depression group. Further, UPmix and BDspectrum had significantly higher psychomotor agitation and distractibility than the other two groups.LimitationsThe present study depended on self-report measures and did not include standardised measures of distractibility and psychomotor agitation. Future research needs to examine pure unipolar patients without any manic symptoms to clarify further how different this group would be from those with mixed features.ConclusionsThe present findings suggest that distractibility and psychomotor agitation may represent the core of mixed states, as they are more common in patients with mixed depression and bipolar spectrum disorder than patients diagnosed with unipolar depression and bipolar I disorder. Future research and clinical implications are discussed.Copyright © 2014 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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