Commentary

Beyond DSM symptoms: Behavioral clues to diagnosing bipolar II disorder

Author and Disclosure Information

 

References

Multiple psychiatric comorbidities, such as having 3 types of anxiety (panic attacks, social phobia, and obsessive-compulsive disorder) or bulimia, seasonal depression, and anxiety.

Multiple pleasure-seeking or “outrageous” behaviors, such as compulsive gambling, sexual addiction, car racing, or skydiving. Another example is having a history of shoplifting, paraphilia, or arrest for participating in a riot, all of which are suggestive of antisocial traits in a patient seeking help for depression.

Sexual excesses, such as dating or having sex with ≥3 individuals concurrently, sometimes on the same day, or demanding sexual intercourse from a partner several times a day. Dr. Akiskal suggested that “sexual prowess” may represent an evolutionary advantage for the perpetuation of bipolar II disorder.

Marital history, such as a history of ≥3 marriages, or maintaining ≥2 families in different cities without being married.

Flamboyance and/or ornamentation. Examples might include wearing loud, colorful clothing (especially red), wearing ≥3 rings, or having piercings in ≥3 different body parts (tongue, nipples, navel, genitalia). Having elaborate tattoos across the body is no longer unique to “hyperthymic” persons with bipolar II disorder because tattoos have become far more common in the general population than they were in the 1970s. However, some take their tattoos to extremes.

Continue to: The above behaviors...

Pages

Recommended Reading

‘Remarkable’ response to diabetes drug in resistant bipolar depression
MDedge Psychiatry
How a community-based program for SMI pivoted during the pandemic
MDedge Psychiatry
Mood stabilizers: Balancing tolerability, serum levels, and dosage
MDedge Psychiatry
Stuck in a rut with the wrong diagnosis
MDedge Psychiatry
Britney Spears and her 13-year conservatorship: An abuse of involuntary care?
MDedge Psychiatry
Psychiatric genomics has a diversity problem
MDedge Psychiatry
Ketamine and psychosis risk: New data
MDedge Psychiatry
Let’s talk about race
MDedge Psychiatry
Obesity treatment in mental illness: Is semaglutide a game changer?
MDedge Psychiatry
‘Reassuring’ findings for second-generation antipsychotics during pregnancy 
MDedge Psychiatry