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  Vol. 49 No. 2, February 1992 TABLE OF CONTENTS
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Rapidly Cycling Affective Disorder

Demographics, Diagnosis, Family History, and Course

William Coryell, MD; Jean Endicott, PhD; Martin Keller, MD

Arch Gen Psychiatry. 1992;49(2):126-131.


Abstract

• Of 919 patients with major affective disorders who completed at least 1 year of a 5-year, semiannual followup, 45 developed a rapidly cycling bipolar course during the first year, but only one developed a rapidly cycling unipolar course. In comparison with patients who showed a non—rapidly cycling bipolar course, those who became rapid cyclers were more likely to be female and to have exhibited depression, hypomania, or cycling between depression and hypomania within the index episode. Family study data revealed no evidence that high cycle frequencies breed true. Rapid cycling was associated with a significantly lower likelihood of recovery in the second year of follow-up but not in the third, fourth, or fifth. These data suggest that rapid cycling is, in the large majority of cases, a transient, nonfamilial manifestation of bipolar affective disorder.



Author Affiliations

From the National Institute of Mental Health Collaborative Program on the Psychobiology of Depression—Clinical Studies, Bethesda, Md.


Footnotes

Accepted for publication March 27, 1991.

Reprint requests to Department of Psychiatry, University of Iowa, 500 Newton Rd, Iowa City, IA 52242 (Dr Coryell).



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