Commentary: Frying pan to fire? Commentary on Stringaris et al. (2018)
- PMID: 29924397
- PMCID: PMC6093282
- DOI: 10.1111/jcpp.12873
Commentary: Frying pan to fire? Commentary on Stringaris et al. (2018)
Abstract
The bipolar disorder diagnosis in prepubertal children became popular because it answered a clinical need to treat the explosive behavior component of irritability and the hope that antimanic strategies would be helpful. Poor definition of episodes resulted in mixing chronic and episodic irritability in samples of children with bipolar disorder. The subsequent dramatic increase in neuroleptic use is a testimony to the importance of the problem of irritability and our need to better understand it. Insofar as our use of the term irritability conflates proneness to anger with the subsequent aggressive response, it will again not be clear who is being studied. We need to uncouple the mood and behavior aspects of irritability for further study or we will have traded the imprecision of "bipolar" for the imprecision of irritability.
© 2018 Association for Child and Adolescent Mental Health.
Comment on
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  Practitioner Review: Definition, recognition, and treatment challenges of irritability in young people.J Child Psychol Psychiatry. 2018 Jul;59(7):721-739. doi: 10.1111/jcpp.12823. Epub 2017 Oct 30. J Child Psychol Psychiatry. 2018. PMID: 29083031 Review.
References
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    - Carlson GA,& Dyson M (2012). Diagnostic implications of informant disagreement about rage outbursts: bipolar disorder or another condition? Isr J Psychiatry Relat Sci. 49(1):44–51 - PubMed
 
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    - Carlson GA (2013).The dramatic rise in neuroleptic use in children: why do we do it and what does it buy us? Theories from inpatient data 1988–2010. J Child Adolesc.Psychopharmacol. 23(3):144–7 - PubMed
 
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    - Carlson GA & Klein DN (2014).How to understand divergent views on bipolar disorder in youth. Annu Rev Clin Psychol. 10:529–51 - PubMed
 
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