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HA

Member
Biploar Disorder Often Rooted in Childhood

SEPTEMBER 1, 2006

TORONTO/ONTARIO/NEWS RELEASE--(CCNMatthews - Sept. 1, 2006) - Psychiatry researchers at Sunnybrook have pinpointed characteristics of a specific type of bipolar disorder that commences in childhood using a community population study.


Participants with bipolar disorder were categorized into three groups based on when the illness began: childhood age at onset, adolescent age at onset, and adult age at onset. The groups were studied to find differences in the characteristics of the disease, such as number of depressions and manias throughout the course of the illness, frequency of episodes, and chronicity of symptoms, as well as differences in the proportion of participants who had drug abuse or dependence or antisocial personality disorder.

"The findings are significant as this data strongly suggests that bipolar disorder has its roots in childhood in a significant number of cases, and in such cases, the nature of the illness is particularly severe," says Dr. Benjamin Goldstein, principal investigator of the study and psychiatrist at Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre. "Longitudinal data will not be available for several years; in the meantime, data like this helps identify this potentially severe subgroup of people with bipolar disorder."

The childhood onset group was more likely to remain ill longer, with fewer periods free of the illness, and to have more prolonged episodes. In addition, both the childhood onset and adolescent onset groups were more likely to have problems with drug abuse or dependence and to have personality disorders.

"This study stresses the importance of increasing awareness of the serious nature of bipolar disorder that onsets in childhood," says Dr. Anthony Levitt, co-principal investigator of the study and chief of Psychiatry at Sunnybrook. "Work is now underway to identify these children at risk as early as possible and to develop preventive strategies to avoid the long term consequences of this illness."

This is the first community-based population study to provide an estimate of the prevalence of childhood onset bipolar disorder. "One in 10 adults with bipolar disorder had the onset in childhood," reports Dr. Goldstein, who is also a Population Health Fellow in the Department of Psychiatry at University of Toronto. "Until recently, this condition has been under-recognized. We hope these results will provide support for the early identification of these children by health care professionals". The study is published in the September 2006 issue of the American Journal of Psychiatry.
 
do they know what causes an adult to become bi-polar? is this something that is biological or can it also be environment that creates the disease?
 

HA

Member
Hi BaseballCap,

My understanding is that all mental illnesses are best understood with a multidimensional approach to causation at this time.

The multidimensional approach looks at the role of biology (genes and their influence, neurotransmitters), environment (viruses, birth/brain injuries, neurotoxins, nutrition), as well as social and psychological (culture, early childhood development, abuse) influences on brain diseases.

For bipolar and it's development in adulthood, the genetic vulnerability or biological predisposition is present with all of the dimensions above influencing it's emergence and course over time.
 

David Baxter PhD

Late Founder
I guess I would answer that question this way, bbc: Probably all people, with the possible exception of psychopaths, can develop depression, reactive to certain life events. However, I suspect that there would need to be an physiological (innate or genetic or possibly the result of a brain injury of some sort) vulnerability for someone to develop bipolar disorder.
 

foghlaim

Member
Heartart or David....

any idea of the age group this research is talking about regarding childhood onset of bipolar? Is it teens or earlier maybe?

thanks
 

David Baxter PhD

Late Founder
Childhood as in pre-adolescence:

Participants with bipolar disorder were categorized into three groups based on when the illness began: childhood age at onset, adolescent age at onset, and adult age at onset.
 

foghlaim

Member
oops.. sorry don't know how i missed that.. or else i just got lost in my own mind thinking on this and forgot to read the article again. feel silly :)

thanks david.
 
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