Therapeutic Dilemmas in the Pharmacotherapy of Bipolar Depression in the Young

Abstract
Pediatric bipolar disorder is commonly mixed with co-occurring symptoms of major depression and mania. Knowledge has begun to accumulate on the treatment of the mania component, but limited information is available to guide the therapeutic approach to bipolar depression. To this end, we reviewed the medical charts of 59 patients with diagnosis of DSM-III-R bipolar disorder from an outpatient pediatric psychopharmacology clinic. Multivariate methods were used to model the probability of improvement and relapse at each visit of clinical follow-up. Serotonin-specific antidepressants were significantly associated with both an increased rate of improvement of bipolar depression-relative risk = 6.7 (1.9-23.6); p = 0.003 - and a significantly greater probability of relapse of manic symptomatology-relative risk = 3.0 (1.2-7.8); p = 0.02. Although mood stabilizers improved manic symptomatology, they had no demonstrable effect on the symptoms of bipolar depression. Despite the increased risk of mood destabilization, serotonin-specific antidepressants did not interfere with the antimanic effects of mood stabilizers. Because bipolar youth commonly come to clinical practice with depression, these results underscore the importance of assessing a lifetime history of bipolar disorder in making treatment decisions in depressed youth.

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