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      The difficult lives of individuals with bipolar disorder: A review of functional outcomes and their implications for treatment

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          Abstract

          Background:

          Most longitudinal or treatment studies in bipolar disorder have used symptomatic or syndromal status as the primary outcome variable. More recently, psychosocial functioning has been highlighted as a key domain of outcome. Patients with bipolar disorder appear to be impaired in all functional domains, although the factors that cause impairment have not been clearly specified.

          Methods:

          This paper reviews cross-sectional and longitudinal studies on functional impairment and its relationship to symptomatic, neurocognitive, personality, and stress variables in bipolar disorder; and the implications of these relationships for defining treatment targets. 93 articles were located through comprehensive MEDLINE, SCOPUS and Web of Science searches.

          Results and discussion:

          Functional recovery following a mood episode consistently lags behind symptomatic and syndromal recovery. Longer term functional impairment is only partly explained by the number of manic/hypomanic episodes. Depression (including subsyndromal states) and persistent neurocognitive impairment are the strongest correlates of functional impairment in bipolar disorder, with personality and psychosocial stressors playing secondary roles. Possible treatment options include: more aggressive treatment of subthreshold depressive states, pharmacotherapies that target cognition (e.g., stimulants), and adjunctive psychotherapies including cognitive remediation.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          7906073
          4424
          J Affect Disord
          J Affect Disord
          Journal of affective disorders
          0165-0327
          1573-2517
          16 April 2020
          22 November 2016
          February 2017
          11 May 2020
          : 209
          : 147-154
          Affiliations
          Department of Psychiatry, Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA, Los Angeles, CA, USA
          Author notes
          [1]

          Both authors contributed to the literature review and writing of this article. They have both approved the final article.

          [* ]Corresponding author. Mgitlin@ 123456mednet.ucla.edu (M.J. Gitlin).
          Article
          PMC7213058 PMC7213058 7213058 nihpa1584897
          10.1016/j.jad.2016.11.021
          7213058
          27914248
          4c31d34b-5c53-43c7-ac1c-84b49c0b8bc2
          History
          Categories
          Article

          Stimulants,Neurocognition,Cognitive remediation,Depression,Mania,Mood stabilizers

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