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. 2000 Feb;157(2):213-9.
doi: 10.1176/appi.ajp.157.2.213.

Phenomenology and outcome of subjects with early- and adult-onset psychotic mania

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Phenomenology and outcome of subjects with early- and adult-onset psychotic mania

G A Carlson et al. Am J Psychiatry. 2000 Feb.

Abstract

Objective: This study examined clinical differences between subjects with early-onset and adult-onset psychotic mania.

Method: Subjects were from an epidemiologically derived, hospitalized sample who met criteria for definite bipolar disorder after 24 months of follow-up and whose index episode had been manic. Information collected regarding demographic characteristics, psychotic and depressive symptoms, childhood behavior problems and school functioning, substance/alcohol use disorders, and episode recurrence for two subgroups were compared: those whose illness first emerged before age 21 (early onset) (N=23) and those whose first episode occurred after age 30 (adult onset) (N=30).

Results: A larger proportion of the early-onset subjects were male, had childhood behavior disorders, had substance abuse comorbidity, exhibited paranoia, and experienced complete episode remission less frequently during 24-month follow-up than the adult-onset subjects.

Conclusions: These data add to the body of evidence that has suggested that many subjects with early-onset psychotic mania have a more severe and developmentally complicated subtype of bipolar disorder.

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