2 resultados para Demographic factors

em Worcester Research and Publications - Worcester Research and Publications - UK


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Background and Aims: Reproductive life events are potential triggers of mood episodes in women with bipolar disorder. We aimed to establish whether a history of premenstrual mood change and postpartum episodes are associated with perimenopausal episodes in women who have bipolar disorder. Methods: Participants were 339 post-menopausal women with DSM-IV bipolar disorder recruited into the Bipolar Disorder Research Network (www.bdrn.org). Women self-reported presence (N = 200) or absence (N = 139) of an illness episode during the perimenopausal period. History of premenstrual mood change was measured using the self-report Premenstrual Symptoms Screening Tool (PSST), and history of postpartum episodes was measured via semi-structured interview (Schedules for Clinical Assessment in Neuropsychiatry, SCAN) and inspection of case-notes. Results: History of a postpartum episode within 6 months of delivery (OR = 2.13, p = 0.03) and history of moderate/severe premenstrual syndrome (OR = 6.33, p < 0.001) were significant predictors of the presence of a perimenopausal episode, even after controlling for demographic factors. When we narrowed the definition of premenstrual mood change to premenstrual dysphoric disorder, it remained significant (OR = 2.68, p = 0.007). Conclusions: Some women who have bipolar disorder may be particularly sensitive to reproductive life events. Previous mood episodes in relation to the female reproductive lifecycle may help clinicians predict individual risk for women with bipolar disorder approaching the menopause. There is a need for prospective longitudinal studies of women with bipolar disorder providing frequent contemporaneous ratings of their mood to overcome the limitations of retrospective self-report data.

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Background and Aims To examine whether a history of mood episodes triggered by sleep loss is associated with (1) postpartum psychosis (PP) and (2) more broadly-defined postpartum mood episodes that included postnatal depression (PND), in women with bipolar disorder (BD). Methods Participants were 622 parous women with a diagnosis of bipolar-I disorder recruited in the UK to the Bipolar Disorder Research Network. Diagnosis and perinatal episodes were assessed via interview and case note data. Women were also asked during the interview whether episodes of mania and/or depression were triggered by sleep loss. We compared the rates of PP and PND within women who did and did not endorse sleep loss as a trigger of mood episodes. Results Women who reported that their episodes of mania were usually triggered by sleep loss were twice as likely to have experienced an episode of PP (OR = 2.00, 95% CI = 1.20–3.36) than women who did not report this. This effect remained significant when controlling for clinical and demographic factors. We found no significant associations between depression triggered by sleep loss and PP. Analyses in which we defined postpartum episodes at a broader level to include both PP and PND were not significant. Conclusions In pregnant women with BD, a history of mania following sleep loss could be a potential marker of vulnerability to severe postpartum episodes. Further study in prospective samples is required in order to confirm these findings, which may have important implications for understanding the aetiology of PP and of mood disorders more generally.