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Journal Article

Citation

Smedler E, Sparding T, Hattab A, Sellgren CM, Landén M. Acta Psychiatr. Scand. 2020; 141(6): 534-540.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2020, John Wiley and Sons)

DOI

10.1111/acps.13174

PMID

32306385

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To investigate external factors that trigger manic and hypomanic relapses and how this is associated with personality and clinical outcome measured as number of affective episodes over a 7-year period.
METHOD: This is a prospective cohort study of 204 meticulously characterized Swedish bipolar disorder patients. Personality was evaluated at baseline using the Swedish universities Scales of Personality in 170 patients, and 90 patients were followed up after approximately 7 years in order to evaluate clinical outcomes.
RESULTS: We found that 44% of the patients reported trigger factors, including sleep disturbance, work- or family-related issues, medication, and illicit drug use. There were no significant differences in any of the personality traits when comparing the 74 patients that reported triggers with the 90 patients that did not. At 7-year follow-up, there was no difference between the groups in number of affective episodes (depressive, hypomanic, manic, or mixed), involuntary commitments, suicide attempts, or self-harm incidents since baseline.
CONCLUSIONS: Around 40% of the patients reported external triggers for manic and hypomanic episodes. However, this was neither associated with personality traits nor number of affective episodes at 7-year follow-up.


Language: en

Keywords

Humans; Adult; Female; Male; Sweden; Prospective Studies; bipolar disorder; personality; Prognosis; Personality; Mania; Bipolar Disorder; relapse; manic episodes; Swedish universities scales of personality; trigger factors

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