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How common is bipolar disorder not otherwise specified diagnosis in hospitalized patients?

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  16 April 2020

S. Guloksuz
Affiliation:
Department of Psychiatry, Bakirköy State Neuropsychiatry Hospital for Research and Training, Istanbul, Turkey
E.T. Oral
Affiliation:
Department of Psychiatry, Bakirköy State Neuropsychiatry Hospital for Research and Training, Istanbul, Turkey

Abstract

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Background and Aim

Bipolar disorder not otherwise specified (BPD-NOS) may be a waste-basket diagnosis for patients who do not fit into the well-defined criteria. There are few studies investigating the course and features of BPD-NOS and some authors claimed that the frequency could be higher than expected. Özcan et al (2003) found that 9% of the bipolar patients in a university research clinic specialized in bipolar disorder were diagnosed as BPD-NOS. Frequency of BPD-NOS among bipolar patients hospitalized in year 2006 in a a tertiary care state reference hospital in İstanbul/Turkey and features leading to the diagnosis as “atypical” are investigated.

Method:

Files of patients hospitalized in 2006 were evaluated retrospectively. Of the 6423 general psychiatric hospitalizations, 1463 were diagnosed as mood disorders. Forensic and adolescent patients, as well as alcohol & substance abuse co-morbidity were excluded.

Results:

There were 821 (56%) male and 642 (44%) female mood disorder patients. BPD-NOS diagnosis among all mood disorder patients were 194 (13.2%). Re-hospitalization rate of patients treated with the diagnosis of BPD-NOS was 6.7%. Duration of illness, episode duration, symptom variety and treatment responses were he most common features “making the diagnosis atypical”.

Conclusions:

A more systematic and detailed evaluation is needed for appropriate acute or preventive treatment. Studies are needed on patients with BD-NOS with comorbid schizophrenia or delusional disorder as specified in DSM-IV-TR.

Type
Poster Session 2: Bipolar Disorders
Copyright
Copyright © European Psychiatric Association 2007
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