Kaplan Mood Disorder
Kaplan Mood Disorder
Kaplan Mood Disorder
Mood Disorders
I. Introduction
Disorders of mood—sometimes called affective disorders encompass a
large spectrum of disorders in which pathologic mood disturbances
dominate the clinical picture. They include the following:
1. Major depressive disorder
2. Persistent depressive disorder (Dysthymia)
3. Cyclothymic disorder
4. Disruptive mood dysregulation disorder
5. Premenstrual dysphoric disorder
6. Bipolar (I and II) and related disorders
7. Mood disorders (depressive and bipolar related) due to another medical
condition
8. Substance/Medication-induced mood (depressive and bipolar related)
disorder
9. The general category of unspecified depressive and bipolar and related
disorders
Mood is a pervasive and sustained feeling tone that is experienced
internally and that influences a person’s behavior and perception of the
world. Affect is the external expression of mood. Mood can be normal,
elevated, or depressed. Healthy persons experience a wide range of moods
and have an equally large repertoire of affective expressions; they feel in
control of their moods and affects.
II. Epidemiology
A. Incidence and prevalence. Mood disorders are common. In the most
recent surveys, major depressive disorder has the highest lifetime
prevalence (almost 17%) of any psychiatric disorder. The annual
incidence (number of new cases) of a major depressive episode is 1.59%
(women, 1.89%; men, 1.10%). The annual incidence of bipolar illness is
less than 1%, but it is difficult to estimate because milder forms of
bipolar disorder are often missed (Tables 11-1 and 11-2).
B. Sex. Major depression is more common in women; bipolar I disorder is
equal in women and men. Manic episodes are more common in women,
and depressive episodes are more common in men.
C. Age. The age of onset for bipolar I disorder is usually about age 30.
However, the disorder also occurs in young children as well as older
adults.
D. Sociocultural. Depressive disorders are more common among single
and divorced persons compared to married persons. No correlation with
socioeconomic status. No difference between races or religious groups.
Table 11-1
Lifetime Prevalence Rates of Depressive Disorders
III. Etiology
A. Neurotransmitters
1. Serotonin. Serotonin has become the biogenic amine
neurotransmitter most commonly associated with depression.
Serotonin depletion occurs in depression; thus, serotonergic agents
are effective treatments. The identification of multiple serotonin
receptor subtypes may lead to even more specific treatments for
depression. Some patients with suicidal impulses have low
cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) concentrations of serotonin metabolites (5-
hydroxyindole acetic acid [5-HIAA]) and low concentrations of
serotonin uptake sites on platelets.
2. Norepinephrine. Abnormal levels (usually low) of norepinephrine
metabolites (3-methoxy-4-hydroxyphenylglycol [MHPG]) are found
in blood, urine, and CSF of depressed patients. Venlafaxine (Effexor)
increases both serotonin and norepinephrine levels and is used in
depression for that reason.
3. Dopamine. Dopamine activity may be reduced in depression and
increased in mania. Drugs that reduce dopamine concentrations (e.g.,
reserpine [Serpasil]) and diseases that reduce dopamine
concentrations (e.g., Parkinson’s disease) are associated with
depressive symptoms. Drugs that increase dopamine concentrations,
such as tyrosine, amphetamine, and bupropion (Wellbutrin), reduce
the symptoms of depression. Two recent theories about dopamine and
depression are that the mesolimbic dopamine pathway may be
dysfunctional in depression and that the dopamine D1 receptor may
be hypoactive in depression.
Table 11-2
Lifetime Prevalence Rates of Bipolar I Disorder, Bipolar II Disorder, Cyclothymic
Disorder, and Hypomania
B. Psychosocial
1. Psychoanalytic. Freud described internalized ambivalence toward a
love object (person), which can produce a pathologic form of
mourning if the object is lost or perceived as lost. This mourning
takes the form of severe depression with feelings of guilt,
worthlessness, and suicidal ideation. Symbolic or real loss of love
object is perceived as rejection. Mania and elation are viewed as
defense against underlying depression. Rigid superego serves to
punish person with feelings of guilt about unconscious sexual or
aggressive impulses.
2. Psychodynamics. In depression, introjection of ambivalently viewed
lost objects leads to an inner sense of conflict, guilt, rage, pain, and
loathing; a pathologic mourning becomes depression as ambivalent
feelings meant for the introjected object are directed at the self. In
mania, feelings of inadequacy and worthlessness are converted by
means of denial, reaction formation, and projection to grandiose
delusions.
3. Cognitive. Cognitive triad of Aaron Beck: (1) negative self-view
(“things are bad because I’m bad”); (2) negative interpretation of
experience (“everything has always been bad”); (3) negative view of
future (anticipation of failure).
4. Learned helplessness. A theory that attributes depression to a
person’s inability to control events. Theory is derived from observed
behavior of animals experimentally given unexpected random shocks
from which they cannot escape.
5. Stressful life events. Often precede first episodes of mood disorders.
Such events may cause permanent neuronal changes that predispose a
person to subsequent episodes of a mood disorder. Losing a parent
before age 11 is the life event most associated with later development
of depression.
IV. Laboratory, Brain Imaging, and Psychological Tests
A. Dexamethasone suppression test. Nonsuppression (positive test result)
represents hyper secretion of cortisol secondary to hyperactivity of
hypothalamic–pituitary–adrenal axis. Abnormal in 50% of patients with
major depression but is of limited clinical usefulness owing to frequency
of false-positives and false-negatives. Diminished release of TSH in
response to thyrotropin-releasing hormone (TRH) reported in both
depression and mania. Prolactin release decreased in response to
tryptophan. Tests are not definitive.
B. Brain imaging. No gross brain changes. Enlarged cerebral ventricles on
computed tomography (CT) in some patients with mania or psychotic
depression; diminished basal ganglia blood flow in some depressive
patients. Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) studies have also indicated
that patients with major depressive disorder have smaller caudate nuclei
and smaller frontal lobes than do control subjects. Magnetic resonance
spectroscopy (MRS) studies of patients with bipolar I disorder have
produced data consistent with the hypothesis that the pathophysiology of
the disorder may involve an abnormal regulation of membrane
phospholipid metabolism.
C. Psychological tests
1. Rating scales. Can be used to assist in diagnosis and assessment of
treatment efficacy. The Beck Depression Inventory (BDI) and Zung
Self-rating Scale are scored by patients. The Hamilton Rating Scale
for Depression (HAM-D), Montgomery Asberg Depression Rating
Scale (MADRS), and Young Manic Rating Scale are scored by the
examiner.
2. Rorschach test. Standardized set of 10 inkblots scored by examiner
—few associations, slow response time in depression.
3. Thematic apperception test (TAT). Series of 30 pictures depicting
ambiguous situations and interpersonal events. Patient creates a story
about each scene. Depressives will create depressed stories, manics
more grandiose and dramatic ones.
V. Bipolar Disorder
There are two types of bipolar disorder: bipolar I characterized by the
occurrence of manic episodes with or without a major depressive episode
and bipolar II characterized by at least one depressive episode with or
without a hypomanic episode.
CLINICAL HINT:
If there is a history of a single full-blown manic episode, the diagnosis will
always be bipolar I; a history of a major depressive episode is always
present in bipolar II.
Table 11-3
Signs and Symptoms of Major Depressive Episode
Table 11-4
Signs and Symptoms of Manic Episode
Table 11-5
Signs and Symptoms of Hypomanic Episode
Table 11-6
Signs and Symptoms: Melancholic Features Specifier
Table 11-7
Signs and Symptoms: Atypical Features Specifier
CLINICAL HINT:
If delusions are mood incongruent, diagnosis is more likely to be
schizophrenia.
Table 11-8
Signs and Symptoms of Persistent Depressive Disorder (Dysthymia)
1. Easily depressed
2. Little joy in living
3. Inclined to be gloomy and morbid
4. Pessimistic, self-deprecatory
5. Low self-esteem
6. Fearful of disapproval, indecisive
7. May be suspicious of others
Table 11-9
Signs and Symptoms of Cyclothymic Disorder
Table 11-10
Clinical Differences Between Depression and Mania
Table 11-11
Neurologic and Medical Causes of Depressive (and Manic) Symptoms
Neurologic
Cerebrovascular diseases
Dementias (including dementia of the Alzheimer’s type with depressed mood)
Epilepsya
Fahr’s diseasea
Huntington’s diseasea
Hydrocephalus
Infections (including HIV and neurosyphilis)a
Migrainesa
Multiple sclerosisa
Narcolepsy
Neoplasmsa
Parkinson’s disease
Progressive supranuclear palsy
Sleep apnea
Traumaa
Wilson’s diseasea
Endocrine
Adrenal (Cushing’s, Addison’s diseases)
Hyperaldosteronism
Menses-relateda
Parathyroid disorders (hyper- and hypo-)
Postpartuma
Thyroid disorders (hypothyroidism and apathetic hyperthyroidism)a
Infectious and inflammatory
AIDSa
Chronic fatigue syndrome
Mononucleosis
Pneumonia—viral and bacterial
Rheumatoid arthritis
Sjögren’s arteritis
Systemic lupus erythematosusa
Temporal arthritis
Tuberculosis
Miscellaneous medical
Cancer (especially pancreatic and other gastrointestinal)
Cardiopulmonary disease
Porphyria
Uremia (and other renal diseases)a
Vitamin deficiencies (B12, folate, niacin, thiamine)a
aThese conditions are also associated with manic symptoms.
Table 11-12
Pharmacologic Causes of Depression and Mania
Antineoplastic drugs
C-Asparaginase 6-Azauridine
Mithramycin Bleomycin
Vincristine Trimethoprim
Zidovudine
Miscellaneous drugs
Acetazolamide Anticholinesterases
Choline Cimetidine
Cyproheptadine Diphenoxylate
Disulfiram Lysergide
Methysergide Mebeverine
Meclizine Metoclopramide
Pizotifen Salbutamol
Adapted from Cummings JL. Clinical Neuropsychiatry. Orlando, FL: Grune & Stratton; 1985:187.
CLINICAL HINT:
Depressed patients with suicidal ideation should be hospitalized if there is
any doubt in the clinician’s mind about the risk. If the clinician cannot
sleep because of worry about a patient, that patient belongs in a hospital.
VIII. Treatment
A. Depressive disorders. Major depressive episodes are treatable in 70%
to 80% of patients. The most effective approach is to integrate
pharmacotherapy with psychotherapeutic interventions.
1. Psychopharmacologic.
a. Most clinicians begin treatment with a selective serotonin reuptake
inhibitor (SSRI). Early transient side effects include anxiety,
gastrointestinal upset, and headache. Educating patients about the
self-limited nature of these effects can enhance compliance. Sexual
dysfunction is often a persistent, common side effect that may
respond to a change in drug or dosage, or adjunctive therapy with
an agent such as bupropion (Wellbutrin) or buspirone (BuSpar).
The early anxiogenic effects of SSRIs may aggravate suicidal
ideation and can be managed by either reducing the dose or adding
an anxiolytic (e.g., 0.5 mg of clonazepam [Klonopin] in the
morning and at night). Insomnia can be managed with a
benzodiazepine, zolpidem (Ambien), trazodone (Desyrel), or
mirtazapine (Remeron). Patients who do not respond to or who
cannot tolerate one SSRI may respond to another. Some clinicians
switch to an agent with a different mechanism of action, such as
bupropion, venlafaxine (Effexor), desvenlafaxine (pristiq),
duloxetine (Cymbalta), mirtazapine (Remeron), a tricyclic, or a
monoamine oxidase inhibitor (MAOI). The tricyclics and MAOIs
are generally considered as second- or third-line agents because of
their side effects and potential lethality in overdose.
CLINICAL HINT:
There is an increased risk of suicide as suicidally depressed patients begin
to improve. They have the physical energy to carry out the act whereas,
before, they lacked the will to do so. Known as paradoxical suicide.
CLINICAL HINT:
An extensive NIH study (STAR*D) developed a pharmacologic protocol for
the treatment of depression. Clinicians can follow the protocol or vary it
depending on the clinical situation and their experience.
Table 11-13
Antidepressant Medication
Usual
Daily
Generic Dose Common Side
(Brand) Name (mg) Effects Clinical Caveats
NE reuptake inhibitors
Desipramine 75– Drowsiness, Overdose may be fatal. Dose titration is needed.
(Norpramin, 300 insomnia, OSH,
Pertofrane) agitation, CA,
weight ↑,
anticholinergica
Protriptyline 20– Drowsiness, Overdose may be fatal. Dose titration is needed.
(Vivactil) 60 insomnia, OSH,
agitation, CA,
anticholinergica
Nortriptyline 40– Drowsiness, OSH, Overdose may be fatal. Dose titration is needed.
(Aventyl, 200 CA, weight ↑,
Pamelor) anticholinergica
Maprotiline 100– Drowsiness, CA, Overdose may be fatal. Dose titration is needed.
(Ludiomil) 225 weight ↑,
anticholinergica
anticholinergica
Table 11-14
Antimanic Medications
This table lists medications for which there are data supporting their use in the treatment of acute mania
Maximum
Usual Recommended
Adult Starting Dose Dose or Blood Common Side
Drug Daily Dose and Titration Level Effects Monitoring
Lithium and anticonvulsants
Lithium Target 300–900 mg; 1.2 mEq/L Nausea, vomiting, Lithium level
level increase by plasma level diarrhea, 12 hours
0.6–1.2 300 mg/day sedation, tremor, after last
mEq/L polyuria, dose and
polydipsia, every week
weight gain, while
acne, cognitive titrating,
slowing then every
2 months
Carbamazepine 800–1,000 Start 200 mg at 1,600 mg/day, Sedation, CBC, LFT,
mg; night, BID, or Level of 12 dizziness, drug level
titrate to TID; increase mcg/mL nausea, every 7–14
clinical by 200 mg/day cognitive days while
response impairment, LFT titrating,
(target elevation, then
level 4– dyspepsia, monthly for
12 ataxia 4 months,
mcg/mL) then every
6–12
months
Carbamazepine 800–1,000 400 mg/day 1,600 mg/day; Sedation, CBC, LFT,
Extended mg; Level of 12 dizziness, drug level
Release titrate to mcg/mL nausea, every 7–14
clinical cognitive days while
response impairment, LFT titrating,
(target elevation, then
level 4– dyspepsia, monthly for
12 ataxia 4 months,
mcg/mL) then every
mcg/mL) then every
6–12
months
Divalproex Titrate to Start 250–500 at Level of 150 Nausea, vomiting, CBC with
50–150 night for 2 mEq/L sedation, weight increased
mg days; increase gain, hair loss platelets,
by 250 LFT level
mg/day. weekly until
Alternative: stable, then
orally load 20– monthly for
30 mg/kg/day 6 months,
to start then every
6–12
months
Oxcarbazepine 600–2,400 Start 300 mg 2,500 mg Fatigue, Electrolytes
dosed BID; increase nausea/vomiting, (sodium)
BID or by 300 mg dizziness,
TID QOD sedation,
diplopia,
hyponatremia
Atypical antipsychotics
Aripiprazole 15–30 mg 5–15 mg/day 30 mg Nausea, None
increase by 10 dyspepsia,
mg/wk somnolence,
vomiting,
akathisia
Clozapine 100–900 12.5–25 mg BID, 900 mg Sedation, CBC with
mg increase by salivation, differential
dosed 25–50 mg/day sweating, every week
BID or tachycardia, for 6
QD hypotension, months
constipation, (more
fever, weight frequent if
gain, diabetes WBC
mellitus <3,500 or
substantial
decrease
from
baseline);
then every
other week
indefinitely,
weight,
glucose
Olanzapine 10–20 mg 5–10 mg at night; 40 mg Somnolence, dry Weight,
dosed also available mouth, glucose
QD or in dissolving dizziness,
BID wafer asthenia, weight
gain
Quetiapine 200–800 25–200 mg at 800 mg Somnolence, dry Weight,
mg night, increase mouth, weight glucose
dosed by 25–50 gain, dizziness
QD or mg/week
BID
Risperidone 3 mg 0.5–1 mg, every 6 mg Somnolence, Prolactin
1–2 days hyperkinesia,
dyspepsia,
nausea
Ziprasidone 40–160 mg 20–40 mg BID; 160 mg Somnolence, EKG
dosed also available dizziness,
QD or in IM form: 10 hypertonia,
BID mg up to every akathisia, EPS
2 hours or 20
mg up to every
4 hours, max
40 mg
Lurasidone 20–120 mg 20 mg single 120 mg Somnolence, None
(bipolar dosed dose available drowsiness
depression) qhs With in Po form: akathisia, rigidity
350 increase by 20
calories mg every week
of food
Asenapine 5–10 mg 5–20 mg dosed Constipation, None
dosed twice daily or sedation,
BID as qhs, akathisia,
available in somnolence,
sublingual oral
tablet (no food hypoesthesia
or drink for 10
minutes post
administration).
Dose can be
increased by
2.5–5 mg
every few
days.
Adapted from data by RMA Hirschfeld HD, RH Perlis MD and LA Vornik, MSc.
For more detailed discussion of this topic, see Chapter 13, Mood Disorders, Section 13.17, p. 1599, in
CTP/X.