Mood Disorders Lecture 3
Mood Disorders Lecture 3
Mood Disorders Lecture 3
Bipolar disorder, also known as manic depression, is a mental illness that brings severe high and low
moods and changes in sleep, energy, thinking, and behavior.
People who have bipolar disorder can have periods in which they feel overly happy and energized
and other periods of feeling very sad, hopeless, and sluggish. In between those periods, they usually
feel normal. You can think of the highs and the lows as two "poles" of mood, which is why it's called
"bipolar" disorder.
The word "manic" describes the times when someone with bipolar disorder feels overly excited and
confident. These feelings can also involve irritability and impulsive or reckless decision-making.
About half of people during mania can also have delusions (believing things that aren't true and that
they can't be talked out of) or hallucinations (seeing or hearing things that aren't there).
"Hypomania" describes milder symptoms of mania, in which someone does not have delusions or
hallucinations, and their high symptoms do not interfere with their everyday life.
The word "depressive" describes the times when the person feels very sad or depressed. Those
symptoms are the same as those described in major depressive disorder or "clinical depression," a
condition in which someone never has manic or hypomanic episodes.
Most people with bipolar disorder spend more time with depressive symptoms than manic or
hypomanic symptoms.
Symptoms
In bipolar disorder, the dramatic episodes of high and low moods do not follow a set pattern.
Someone may feel the same mood state (depressed or manic) several times before switching to
the opposite mood. These episodes can happen over a period of weeks, months, and sometimes
even years.
How severe it gets differs from person to person and can also change over time, becoming more
or less severe.
Symptoms of mania ("the highs"):
Excessive happiness, hopefulness, and excitement
Sudden changes from being joyful to being irritable, angry, and hostile
Restlessness
Rapid speech and poor concentration
Increased energy and less need for sleep
Unusually high sex drive
Making grand and unrealistic plans
Showing poor judgment
Drug and alcohol abuse
Becoming more impulsive
Less need for sleep
Less of an appetite
Larger sense of self-confidence and well-being
Being easily distracted
During depressive periods ("the lows"), a person with bipolar disorder may have:
Sadness
Loss of energy
Feelings of hopelessness or worthlessness
Not enjoying things they once liked
Trouble concentrating
Forgetfulness
Talking slowly
Less of a sex drive
Inability to feel pleasure
Uncontrollable crying
Trouble making decisions
Irritability
Needing more sleep
Insomnia
Appetite changes that make you lose or gain weight
Thoughts of death or suicide
Attempting suicide
Although family studies cannot by themselves establish a genetic basis for the disorder, results
from twin studies dating back to the 1950s also point to a genetic basis because the concordance
rates for these disorders are much higher for identical than for fraternal twins. For example, one
review found that the average concordance rate was about 60 percent for monozygotic twins and
about 12 percent for dizygotic twins. The best study to date found that 67 percent of
monozygotic twins with bipolar disorder had a co-twin who shared the diagnosis of bipolar or
unipolar disorder (60 percent of these concordant co-twins had bipolar disorder, and 40 percent
had unipolar disorder). The concordance rate in dizygotic twins was 19 percent. This and other
studies suggest that genes account for about 80 to 90 percent of the variance in the liability to
develop bipolar I disorder. This is higher than heritability estimates for unipolar disorder or any
of the other major adult psychiatric disorders, including schizophrenia. Moreover, genetic
influences are even stronger in early- as opposed to late-onset bipolar disorder. Efforts to locate
the chromosomal site(s) of the implicated gene or genes in this genetic transmission of bipolar
disorder suggest that it is polygenic. Although a great deal of research has been directed at
identifying candidate genes through linkage analysis and association studies, no consistent
support yet exists for any specific mode of genetic transmission of bipolar disorder, according to
several comprehensive reviews.
Neurochemical Factors
The early monoamine hypothesis for unipolar disorder was extended to bipolar disorder, the
hypothesis being that if depression is caused by deficiencies of norepinephrine or serotonin, then
perhaps mania is caused by excesses of these neurotransmitters. There is good evidence for
increased norepinephrine activity during manic episodes and less consistent evidence for lowered
norepinephrine activity during depressive episodes. However, serotonin activity appears to be
low in both depressive and manic phases. As noted earlier, norepinephrine, serotonin, and
dopamine are all involved in regulating our mood states. Evidence for the role of dopamine
stems in part from research showing that increased dopaminergic activity in several brain areas
may be related to manic symptoms of hyperactivity, grandiosity, and euphoria. High doses of
drugs such as cocaine and amphetamines, which are known to stimulate dopamine, also produce
manic-like behavior.
Moreover, personality variables and cognitive styles that are related to goal-striving, drive, and
incentive motivation have been associated with bipolar disorder. For example, two personality
variables associated with high levels of achievement striving and increased sensitivity to rewards
in the environment predicted increases in manic symptoms—especially during periods of active
goal striving or goal attainment such as studying for an important exam and then doing very well
in it. Another study found that students with a pessimistic attributional style who also had
negative life events showed an increase in depressive symptoms whether they had bipolar or
unipolar disorder. Interestingly, however, the bipolar students who had a pessimistic attributional
style and experienced negative life events also showed increases in manic symptoms at other
points in time.