Sapir et al. International Journal of Bipolar Disorders 2013, 1:27
http://www.journalbipolardisorders.com/content/1/1/27
RESEARCH
Open Access
Behavioral addictions in euthymic patients with
bipolar I disorder: a comparison to controls
Ran Sapir1, Ada H Zohar1, Yuly Bersudsky2, RH Belmaker2 and Yamima Osher2*
Abstract
Background: Bipolar disorder may be associated with a hypersensitive behavioral approach system and therefore
to increased reward sensitivity. The objective of this study is to explore the interrelationships between bipolar
disorder, behavioral addictions, and personality/temperament traits in a group of euthymic outpatients with bipolar
I disorder and in a group of comparison subjects.
Methods: Fifty clinically stable patients and 50 comparison subjects matched for age, sex, and educational level
were administered the Temperament and Character Inventory-140 and the Behavioral Addiction Scale.
Results: The patient group scored significantly higher than comparison subjects for two benign behavioral
addictions (music, shopping) as well as for smoking. Comparison subjects scored higher on two harmful behavioral
addictions (drugs, alcohol). Novelty Seeking was positively correlated with harmful addictions, and Cooperativeness
was negatively correlated with harmful addictions, in both groups.
Discussion: The hypersensitive behavioral approach system model of bipolar disorder would predict higher levels
of various addictions in bipolar patients as compared to controls. In this study, this was true for three behavioral
addictions, whereas controls showed higher levels of behavioral addiction to drugs and alcohol. This may be
because the patients in this study are stable, have received considerable psychoeducation, and are relatively
adherent to their medication recommendations. Temperament and character traits may play roles both as risk and
protective factors regarding behavioral addictions.
Keywords: Bipolar disorder; Behavioral approach system; Behavioral addictions; Temperament
Background
It has been suggested (Depue and Iacono 1989; Alloy
and Abramson 2010) that bipolar disorder is associated
with a hypersensitive behavioral approach system (BAS).
According to this model (Gray 1973; Gray and McNaughton 2004), there are three brain systems which
affect behavior and emotion. The fight/flight/freeze system (FFFS) organizes behavior in the face of aversive
stimuli which can be avoided or escaped. The behavioral
inhibition system (BIS) is activated by association with
punishment or termination of reward, while the BAS is
activated in response to reward or the termination of
punishment (Franken et al. 2006). Once activated, the
BAS initiates motor activity, positive affect, and motivation for reward; the BAS has been related to the
* Correspondence: yamy@bgu.ac.il
2
Department of Psychiatry, Faculty of Health Sciences, Ben Gurion University
of the Negev, Beer Sheva, Israel
Full list of author information is available at the end of the article
activation of several dopamine pathways and brain regions including the nucleus accumbens, the orbitofrontal
cortex, the anterior cingulated cortex, and the dorsolateral prefrontal cortex (Depue and Collins 1999; Berns
et al. 2001).
Alloy and Abramson (2010) offered a dysregulation
perspective to explain how hypersensitivity in the BAS
system is expressed in individuals vulnerable to bipolar
spectrum disorders. It would appear that a sensitive
BAS, hyper-reactive to cues involving reward or termination of punishment, becomes dysregulated easily. Such
sensitivity may lead to great variability in BAS activation
over time and across situations in response to stimuli.
An overactive BAS could result in manic-like behavior
(hyperactivity, enhanced appetitive behavior, euphoric
or irritable mood), whereas an underactive BAS could
result in depression-like behavior (anhedonia, lack of
motivation, passivity) (Urosevic et al. 2008).
© 2013 Sapir et al.; licensee Springer. This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons
Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction
in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
Sapir et al. International Journal of Bipolar Disorders 2013, 1:27
http://www.journalbipolardisorders.com/content/1/1/27
A possible role for BAS dysregulation in the bipolar
spectrum in general and in patients with bipolar I specifically has been supported in several studies using the
self-report BIS/BAS scale (Carver and White 1994).
Alloy et al. (2009c) and Meyer et al. (2001) found higher
BAS scores in euthymic bipolar I patients as compared
to healthy controls. Similar results were reported by
Salavert et al. (2007) using a different self-report measure of BAS sensitivity. In two studies comparing bipolar
spectrum participants (bipolar II and cyclothymic) to
demographically matched controls, the bipolar spectrum
group reported higher total scores in the BAS (Alloy
et al. 2008; Alloy et al. 2009b). In one prospective highrisk design study, adolescents with high BAS scores,
over 12 to 13 years of follow-up, had a higher probability and a shorter time to onset of bipolar spectrum
disorders than did a group with moderate scores (Alloy
et al. 2012).
Assuming that bipolar disorder (BP) is related to a
hypersensitive BAS and therefore to increased reward
sensitivity, it would seem logical to predict unusually
high rates of substance use, abuse, and addiction among
patients with BP disorder. In fact, studies have shown
prevalence of substance abuse among patients diagnosed
with bipolar I disorder to range between 35% and 60%,
approximately three to nine times the prevalence in the
general population (Lagerberg et al. 2010; Merikangas
et al. 2007; ten Have et al. 2002). Additionally, there is
higher lifetime prevalence of substance use disorders
(SUDs) in bipolar disorder as compared to other mood
disorders (Quello et al. 2005).
Possible specific links between the BAS and SUDs
have been explored in non-patient as well as in patient
samples. Franken and Muris (2005) found that the BAS
dimension of fun seeking correlated positively with a
number of illegal substances which undergraduate students had used, frequency of binge drinking, and overall
quantity of alcohol consumed; the BAS dimension of
drive also correlated (weakly) with the amount of illegal
substances used. In patients with bipolar spectrum disorders, Alloy et al. (2009a) found that high BAS sensitivity
predicted greater substance use problems at follow-up,
even after controlling for lifetime SUDs.
These findings suggest that BAS hypersensitivity is related to both vulnerability to SUDs and to mood symptoms. Interestingly, the sensitivity of the reward system
is hypothesized to involve dopaminergic projections
(Urosevic et al. 2008) which are also involved in the
neurobiology of both substance and behavioral addictions (Grant et al. 2006).
Substance use is one element of the larger phenotype
of behavioral addiction. Behavioral addictions (BAs) are
similar to substance addiction in exhibiting diminished
control, but the main expression of the addiction is its
Page 2 of 6
behavioral focus - it does not necessarily include the ingestion of a psychoactive substance. BAs are experienced
as pleasurable and give relief and excitement whether
the addiction is to music, exercise, gambling, or drugs
(Meyer et al. 2007).
Substance abuse and behavioral addictions have much
in common, including ‘natural history, phenomenology,
tolerance, co-morbidity, overlapping genetic contribution, neurobiological mechanisms, and response to treatment’ (Grant et al. 2010, p. 233). It is not surprising,
therefore, that the prevalence of behavioral addictions
has been found to be higher in patients with bipolar disorder than among healthy controls - 33% vs. 13% - in
one study (Di Nicola et al. 2010).
It is not clear what role personality factors may play in
the relationship between BP disorder and BAs. In particular, traits related to disinhibition or behavioral undercontrol may mediate the diathesis to both bipolar
disorder and behavioral addictions. The psychobiological
model of personality, developed by Cloninger (Cloninger
et al. 1993; Cloninger and Svrakic 1997), is a two-tier
system. The first tier, the temperament traits, includes
Harm Avoidance (HA), Novelty Seeking (NS), Reward
Dependence (RD), and Persistence (PS). The second tier,
the character traits, includes Self-directedness (SD),
Cooperativeness (CO), and Self-transcendence (ST).
Mardaga and Hansenne (2007) explored the connection
between these two models in an undergraduate sample
of 150 participants and found that BAS scores were predicted by high novelty seeking and high persistence
scores. We decided to further explore the interrelationships between bipolar disorder, behavioral addictions,
and personality/temperament traits by comparing responses on two self-report questionnaires, one for behavioral addictions and one a measure of personality according
to Cloninger’s model, administered to euthymic adult
bipolar patients and to a matched healthy control group.
This study was approved by the BGU Institutional Review
Board.
Methods
The patient group consisted of 50 adult (ages 18 to 65)
euthymic patient volunteers diagnosed as having bipolar
I disorder as diagnosed by DSM-IV criteria based on
chart review and clinical interview and were recruited
from the well-defined bipolar patient population of the
ambulatory Mood Disorders Clinic of the Beer Sheva
Mental Health Center. Every patient recruited was well
known to the clinic staff, and some have been treated by
the same team for over 20 years. (Osher et al. 2010).
Exclusion criteria were dementia or language skills inadequate for comprehension of the questionnaires in available languages. The control group was recruited from
the community and consisted of 50 healthy volunteers
Sapir et al. International Journal of Bipolar Disorders 2013, 1:27
http://www.journalbipolardisorders.com/content/1/1/27
matched with patients for age (±5 years), sex, gender,
and educational level. The participants aged 40 and
older were recruited in the Sharon area in Israel and
were drawn from an ongoing longitudinal study of
personality (Cloninger and Zohar 2011). The younger
participants were recruited using a snowball technique.
Procedure
Eligible patients coming to the outpatient mood disorders clinic for their routine appointments were invited
to participate in the study after euthymic status had
been confirmed by consensus between the two treating
clinicians (YO and RHB or YB). The goals of the study
were explained, and signed informed consent documents
were obtained. The two self-report measures were administered in the patient’s preferred language, either by
paper and pencil format or directly into a notebook
computer, according to the preference of the participant.
Healthy control participants were contacted by the experimenter (RS) and invited to take part in this study. In
all cases, the experimenter (RS) was present to address
any questions or concerns as they arose.
Instruments
All participants were administered the 140-item version of
the Temperament and Character Inventory-Revised (TCI-R),
a Likert-scale self-report questionnaire (Cloninger 1999;
Hebrew: Zohar and Cloninger 2011), measuring four temperament dimensions (Novelty Seeking, Harm Avoidance,
Reward Dependence, and Persistence) and three character dimensions (Self-directedness, Cooperativeness,
and Self-transcendence).
Addictive tendencies were measured by the Behavioral
Addiction Scale, a 96-item questionnaire developed
by Meyer et al. (2007). Participants were asked eight
addiction-related questions for each of the 12 domains:
alcohol, cigarettes, drugs, caffeine, chocolate, exercise,
gambling, music, internet, shopping, work, and love/relationships. Based on addiction-related criteria developed by Brown (1993), all participants were asked (1)
whether they regarded the substance/activity as important (salience), (2) whether they regarded it as enjoyable
(euphoria), (3) whether they felt the need to consume
more/engage in it more to achieve the same effect (tolerance), (4) whether they felt discomfort upon discontinuation (withdrawal), (5) whether the substance/activity
had affected their relationships with others (conflict 1),
(6) whether the substance/activity had affected other
life domains, such as work or hobbies (conflict 2), (7)
whether they had unsuccessfully tried to quit (relapse
and reinstatement), and (8) whether they regarded themselves as addicted to the substance/activity (identification with addiction). Five-point response scales ranging
from ‘very false for me’ (1) to ‘very true for me’ (5) were
Page 3 of 6
used for each item. Thus, a total of 96 addiction-related
items were administered. The behavioral addictions were
divided to two categories: harmful addictions, including
alcohol, drugs, cigarettes, and gambling; and benign
addictions, including chocolate, caffeine, exercise, shopping, internet, love relationships, music, and work.
Separate scores were computed for harmful and benign
behavioral addictions. Total behavioral addiction scores
were computed as the sum of both types of BAs.
Results
There were no significant differences between the patient
and control groups with respect to age (42.2 ± 11.92 vs.
43.2 ± 16.23; t = 0.18, p = 0.85) or sex (27 females, 23 males
in each group). Control participants were slightly more educated than patients on average (15.1 ± 2.85 vs. 13.6 ± 2.36;
t = −2.94, p = 0.005).
Bipolar patients had an average age of onset of 23.6
years (SD = 7.3, range 12 to 47) and had been ill for an
average of 19.3 years (SD = 10.8, range 1 to 47). All patients were receiving psychotropic medication, with 35
on lithium, 14 on anticonvulsants, 26 on atypical antipsychotics, and another 6 on typical antipsychotics; five
patients received an antidepressant. The total is more
than 50 patients as only 18 patients were on monotherapy, while 28 patients received two medications and 4
patients received three or more.
TCI
Repeated measures ANOVA with summed scale scores
as the within-subject factors showed no significant effect
for group [F (1,98) = 2.8, p = 0.1] and no significant interaction effect [F (6, 588) = 0.8, p = 0.5]. Results are presented in Table 1.
Behavioral addictions
Repeated measures ANOVA with BA domains as withinsubject factors showed a significant group X domain
Table 1 Comparison of TCI-140 scores for bipolar patients
and comparison subjects
TCI scale
Bipolar
Controls
N = 50
N = 50
Novelty Seeking
53.66 ± 9.1
54.2 ± 9.9
Harm Avoidance
61.48 ± 10.8
56.52 ± 11.0
Reward Dependence
67.14 ± 9.0
65.74 ± 9.3
Persistence
63.2 ± 12.9
63.44 ± 10.3
Self-directedness
71.02 ± 12.7
71.02 ± 9.8
Cooperativeness
76.34 ± 9.1
74.42 ± 9.1
Self-transcendence
41.78 ± 11.3
39.98 ± 9.8
Temperament and Character Inventory summed scale scores (mean ± SD) for
euthymic patients with bipolar I disorder and for matched healthy comparison
subjects. No overall significant differences were found.
Sapir et al. International Journal of Bipolar Disorders 2013, 1:27
http://www.journalbipolardisorders.com/content/1/1/27
interaction [F (11,1078) = 6.0, p < 0.0001]. Post-hoc (LSD
test) comparisons revealed significant differences (p < 0.05)
on several individual BAs, with BP patients showing higher
scores on two benign BAs (music and shopping) and higher
scores on smoking. Control group participants showed
higher scores on two harmful BAs (drugs (p = 0.06) and
alcohol (p < 0.05)). Results are presented in Figure 1.
Relationship of TCI and BAs
In order to explore the relationship between temperament/character factors and behavioral addictions, correlations (Pearson’s r) were computed between the seven
TCI factors and behavioral addictions (grouped as harmful or benign). Results are presented in Table 2. In both
patients and controls, novelty seeking was positively correlated with harmful addictions (p < 0.03), whereas cooperativeness was negatively correlated with harmful
addictions (p < 0.05). Self-transcendence was positively
correlated with both harmful and benign addictions in
controls (p = 0.05), but with only benign addictions in
patients (p < 0.03).
Discussion
The hypersensitive behavioral approach system model of
bipolar disorder would predict higher levels of various
addictions in bipolar patients as compared to controls,
and in this study, we tested this hypothesis by looking at
behavioral addictions in addition to the more commonly
studied substance addictions. Euthymic bipolar patients
did in fact show significantly elevated levels of two benign behavioral addictions (shopping and music) as well
as smoking. Bipolar patients’ levels of drug- and alcoholrelated addiction were, surprisingly, lower than those
reported by healthy controls. We discuss possible explanations for this below.
The finding of higher tobacco use among BP patients
as compared to healthy controls is consistent with other
Figure 1 Comparison of behavioral addiction scores
between groups.
Page 4 of 6
Table 2 Correlations between TCI-140 and Behavioral
Addiction Scale scores for bipolar patients and comparison subjects
TCI scale
Harmful addictions
Benign addictions
Patients
Controls
Patients
Controls
Novelty Seeking
0.33*
0.32*
0.22
0.20
Harm Avoidance
−0.14
−0.07
−0.21
0.12
Reward Dependence
−0.09
0.16
0.26
0.01
Persistence
0.11
0.13
0.32*
0.12
Self-directedness
−0.19
−0.05
0.04
−0.26
Cooperativeness
−0.42**
−0.28*
0.02
−0.26
0.21
0.29*
0.31*
0.29*
Self-transcendence
Pearson’s r correlations between Temperament and Character Inventory-140
and behavioral addiction scores for euthymic bipolar (N = 50) and healthy
comparison (N = 50) subjects. *p < 0.05; **p < 0.001.
reports (Diaz et al. 2009; Leonard et al. 2001; Itkin et al.
2001). High rates of substance abuse are also often reported among bipolar patients (Lagerberg et al. 2010;
Strakowski and DelBello 2000; Swann 2010). We suspect
that our finding of lower levels of substance abuse (i.e.,
illicit drugs and alcohol) among the bipolar subjects may
be related to the fact that the bipolar subjects in this
study were stable and euthymic and, as a group, have received considerable psychoeducational exposure and are
relatively adherent to medication recommendations, as
indicated by frequent tests of medication blood levels
(see Osher et al. 2010). It also became clear during the
testing sessions that many of the bipolar patients had
(ab)used drugs and/or alcohol in the past but had modified these behaviors since beginning treatment in the
clinic.
This study also explored the relationships between behavioral addictions and personality factors (temperament
and character as measured by the TCI-R). In both BP
patients and controls, novelty seeking was positively correlated to harmful addictions. This finding is consistent
with findings in non-clinical samples regarding consumption of both multiple substances, including illicit
drugs and alchohol (Chakroun et al. 2004), and cigarettes (Dinn et al. 2004). The character trait of cooperativeness was found to be negatively related to harmful
addictions in both groups. Overall, these findings suggest
that temperament and character traits may play roles
both as risk factors and as protective factors regarding
BAs in euthymic bipolar patients as well as in healthy
controls.
One limitation of this study is that the BP patient
group consisted mostly of residents of southern Israel,
while the control group was recruited mostly from the
Sharon area, Israel. Although the distance between the
regions is not great, there may be some social or socioeconomic differences between the two groups.
Sapir et al. International Journal of Bipolar Disorders 2013, 1:27
http://www.journalbipolardisorders.com/content/1/1/27
Conclusions
The hypersensitive BAS model of bipolar disorder provides a possible framework for the integration of biological, behavioral, and neurological aspects of this
devastating illness. Our findings are largely consistent
with this model and contribute to a growing literature,
suggesting the importance of continued elucidation of
the role of a hypersensitive BAS in the pathogenesis of
bipolar affective disorder.
Competing interests
The authors declare that they have no competing interests.
Authors’ contributions
RS was responsible for data collection and helped draft the manuscript. AZ
participated in the design of the study and performed the statistical analyses.
YB participated in the design of the study, performed statistical analyses, and
helped with the interpretation of results. RHB made substantial contributions
to the conception and design of this study. YO conceived and designed the
study, assisted with recruitment and data collection, and drafted the final
manuscript. All authors read and approved the final manuscript.
Author details
1
Department of Psychology, Ruppin Academic Center, Emek Hefer, Israel.
2
Department of Psychiatry, Faculty of Health Sciences, Ben Gurion University
of the Negev, Beer Sheva, Israel.
Received: 14 October 2013 Accepted: 4 December 2013
Published: 23 December 2013
References
Alloy LB, Abramson LY. The role of the behavioral approach system (BAS) in
bipolar spectrum disorders. Current Directions in Psychological Science. 2010;
19:189–94. doi:10.1177/0963721410370292.
Alloy LB, Abramson LY, Walshaw PD, Cogswell A, Grandin LD, Hughes ME,
Iacoviello BM, Whitehouse WG, Urosevic S, Nusslock R, Hogan ME. Behavioral
approach system and behavioral inhibition system sensitivities:
prospective prediction of bipolar mood episodes. Bipolar Disorders. 2008;
10:310–22.
Alloy LB, Bender RE, Wagner CA, Whitehouse WG, Abramson LY, Hogan ME,
Sylyia LG, Harmon-Jones E. Bipolar spectrum – substance use cooccurrence: behavioral approach system (BAS) sensitivity and impulsiveness as shared personality vulnerabilities. Journal of Personality and Social
Psychology. 2009a; 97(3):549–65.
Alloy LB, Abramson LY, Urosevic S, Bender RE, Wagner CA. Longitudinal
predictors of bipolar spectrum disorders: a behavioral approach system
(BAS) perspective. Clinical Psychology: Science and Practice. 2009b; 16:206–26.
doi:10.1111/j.1468-2850.2009.01160.x.
Alloy LB, Abramson LY, Walshaw PD, Gerstein RK, Keyser JD, Whitehouse WG,
Urosevic S, Nusslock R, Hogan ME, Harmon-Jones E. Behavioral approach
system (BAS)-relevant cognitive styles and bipolar spectrum disorders:
concurrent and prospective associations. J Abnorm Psychol. 2009c;
118(3):459–71.
Alloy LB, Bender RE, Whitehouse WG, Wagner CA, Liu RT, Grant DA, Jager-Hyman
S, Molz A, Choi JY, Harmon-Jones E, Abramson LY. High behavioral approach system (BAS) sensitivity, reward responsiveness, and goal-striving
predict first onset of bipolar spectrum disorders: a prospective behavioral
high-risk design. J Abnorm Psychol. 2012; 121(2):339–51.
Berns GS, McClure SM, Pagnoni G, Montague PR. Predictability modulates
human brain response to reward. The Journal of Neuroscience. 2001;
21:2793–98.
Brown RIF. Some contributions of the study of gambling to other addictions.
In: Eadington WR, Cornelius JA, editors. Gambling behavior and problem
gambling. Reno, NV: University of Nevada; 1993: p. 241–72.
Carver C, White T. Behavioral inhibition, behavioral activation, and affective
response to impending reward and punishment: the BIS/BAS scales.
Journal of Personality and Social Psychology. 1994; 67(2):319–33.
Page 5 of 6
Chakroun N, Doron J, Swendsen J. Substance use, affective problems and
personality traits: test of two association models. Encephale. 2004;
30(6):564–69.
Cloninger CR. The Temperament and Character Inventory—Revised. St. Louis, MO:
Center for Psychobiology of Personality, Washington University; 1999.
Available from C. R. Cloninger, Washington University School of Medicine,
Department of Psychiatry, PO Box 8134, St. Louis, MO, 63110.
Cloninger CR, Svrakic DM. Integrative psychobiological approach to psychiatric
assessment and treatment. Psychiatry. 1997; 60(2):41–120.
Cloninger CR, Zohar AH. Personality and the perception of health and
happiness. Journal of Affective Disorders. 2011; 128:24–32.
Cloninger CR, Svrakic DM, Przybeck TR. A psychobiological model of temperament
and character. Archive of General Psychiatry. 1993; 50(12):975–90.
Depue RA, Collins PF. Neurobiology of the structure of personality: dopamine,
facilitation of incentive motivation, and extraversion. Behavioral and Brain
Sciences. 1999; 22:491–517.
Depue RA, Iacono WG. Neurobehavioral aspects of affective disorders. Annual
Review of Psychology. 1989; 40:457–92.
Di Nicola M, Tedeschi D, Mazza M, Martinotti G, Harnic D, Catalano V, Bruschi A,
Pozzi G, Bria P, Janiri L. Behavioral addictions in bipolar disorder patients:
Role of impulsivity and personality dimensions. Journal of Affective
Disorders. 2010; 125:82–8.
Diaz FJ, James D, Botts S, Maw L, Susce MT, De Leon J. Tobacco smoking
behaviors in bipolar disorder: A comparison of the general population,
schizophrenia and major depression. Bipolar Disorders. 2009; 11(2):154–65.
Dinn WM, Aycicegi A, Harris CL. Cigarette smoking in a student sample:
neurocognitive and clinical correlates. Addictive Behaviors. 2004; 29:107–26.
Franken IHA, Muris P. BIS/BAS personality characteristics and college students’
substance use. Personality and Individual Differences. 2005; 40:1497–503.
Franken IHA, Muris P, Georgieva I. Gray’s model of personality and addiction.
Addictive behaviors. 2006; 31:399–403.
Grant JE, Brewer JA, Potenza MN. The neurobiology of substance and
behavioral addictions. CNS Spectr. 2006; 11:924–30.
Grant JE, Potenza MN, Weinstein A, Gorelick DA. Introduction to behavioral
addictions. The American Journal of Drug and Alcohol Abuse. 2010;
36(5):233–41.
Gray JA. Causal theories of personality and how to test them. In: Royce JR,
editor. Multivariate analysis and psychological theory (pp.409–463). New York:
Academic; 1973.
Gray JA, McNaughton N. The neuropsychology of anxiety: an enquiry into the
functions of the septo-hippocampal system (second ed). Oxford: Oxford
University Press; 2004.
Itkin O, Nemets B, Einat H. Smoking habits in bipolar and schizophrenic
outpatients in southern Israel. Journal of Clinical Psychiatry. 2001;
62(4):269–72.
Lagerberg TV, Andreassen OA, Ringen PA, Berg AO, Larsson S, Agartz I, Sundet K,
Melle I. Excessive substance use in bipolar disorder is associated with
impaired functioning rather than clinical characteristics, a descriptive
study. BMC Psychiatry. 2010; 10:9. doi:10.1186/1471-244X-10-9.
Leonard S, Adler LE, Benhammou K, Berger R, Breese CR, Drebing C, Gault J, Lee
MJ, Logel J, Olincy A, Ross RG, Stevens K, Sullivan B, Vianzon R, Virnich DE,
Waldo M, Walton K, Freedman R. Smoking and mental illness.
Pharmacology, Biochemistry, Behavior. 2001; 70:561–70.
Mardaga S, Hansenne M. Relationships between Cloninger’s biosocial model of
personality and the behavioral inhibition/approach systems (BIS/BAS).
Personality and Individual Differences. 2007; 42:715–22.
Merikangas KR, Akiskal HS, Angst J, Greenberg PE, Hirschfeld RM, Petukhova M,
Kessler RC. Lifetime and 12-month prevalence of bipolar spectrum disorder in the national comorbidity survey replication. Arch Gen Psychiatry.
2007; 64:543–52.
Meyer B, Johnson SL, Winters R. Responsiveness to threat and incentive in
bipolar disorder: relations of the BIS/BAS scales with symptoms. Journal of
Psychopathology and Behavioral Assessment. 2001; 23:133–43.
Meyer B, Rahman R, Shepherd R. Hypomanic personality features and addictive
tendencies. Personality and Individual Differences. 2007; 42:801–10.
Osher Y, Bersudsky Y, Belmaker RH. The new lithium clinic. Neuropsychobiology.
2010; 62(1):17–26. doi:10.1159/000314306.
Quello SB, Brady KT, Sonne SC. Mood disorders and substance use disorder:
a complex comorbidity. Science and Practice Perspective. 2005; 3:13–21.
Salavert J, Caseras X, Torrubia R, Furest S, Arranz B, Dueñas R, San L. The
functioning of the behavioral activation and inhibition systems in bipolar
Sapir et al. International Journal of Bipolar Disorders 2013, 1:27
http://www.journalbipolardisorders.com/content/1/1/27
Page 6 of 6
I euthymic patients and its influence in subsequent episodes over an
eighteen-month period. Personality and Individual Differences. 2007;
42:1323–31.
Strakowski MS, DelBello MP. The co-occurrence of bipolar and substance use
disorders. Clinical Psychology Review. 2000; 20(2):191–206.
Swann AC. The strong relationship between bipolar and substance-use disorder.
Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences. 2010; 1187:276–93.
ten Have M, Vollebergh W, Bijl R, Nolen WA. Bipolar disorder in the general
population in the Netherlands (prevalence, consequences and care utilization):
results from the Netherlands Mental Health Survey and Incidence Study
(NEMESIS). Journal of Affective Disorders. 2002; 68(2–3):203–13.
Urosevic S, Abramson LY, Harmon-Jones E, Alloy LB. Dysregulation of the
behavioral approach system (BAS) in bipolar spectrum disorders: review
of the theory and evidence. Clinical Psychology Review. 2008; 28:1188–205.
Zohar AH, Cloninger CR. The psychometric properties of the TCI-140 in
Hebrew. European Journal of Psychological Assessment. 2011; 27:73–80.
doi:10.1186/2194-7511-1-27
Cite this article as: Sapir et al.: Behavioral addictions in euthymic
patients with bipolar I disorder: a comparison to controls. International
Journal of Bipolar Disorders 2013 1:27.
Submit your manuscript to a
journal and benefit from:
7 Convenient online submission
7 Rigorous peer review
7 Immediate publication on acceptance
7 Open access: articles freely available online
7 High visibility within the field
7 Retaining the copyright to your article
Submit your next manuscript at 7 springeropen.com