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Notes sur la comorbidité |
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Jeudi 18 décembre 2003
: Comorbidité
(voir aussi Conséquences et complications)
Les principaux
documents de
référence sont
indiqués en fin. Il n'est pas question d'être
exhaustif sur un tel
sujet, aussi a-t-on privilégie les documents
récents faisant autorité
(rapports de recherche) et
les rares documents en français. La presse de
vulgarisation
médicale a
été volontairement écartée.
- Jeudi 18
décembre 2003 : Les
maladies
associées
- On parle aussi de COMORBIDITE.
- Ce sont des maladies plus fréquentes que la moyenne dans
la population des personnes souffrant de troubles bipolaire.
- Le lien peut provenir d'une prédisposition
génétique "commune", d'événements
déclenchants communs, une maladie peut être
conséquence de l'autre ou encore les traitements
médicamenteux sur une maladie déclenchent l'autre.
- I. TOC Troubles obsessionels
- II. TP Troubles panique.
- III. ANXIETE généralisée. (TAG)
- IV. Troubles des conduites alimentaires; (TCA)
- V. Hyperactivité avec déficit d'attention (AHAD)
- VI. Alcool.
- VII. Dépendance aux toxiques (en particulier canabis)
Questions-Réponses
(résumé SGDG)
Q1. Tabac
Q2.
Schizophrénie et états borderline.
Q3. Le sevrage
du LOXAPAC entraine-t-il une rechute dépressive ?
Q4. Que faire
dans une tendance obsessionelle légére : la contrer ou se
laisser aller.
Q5. La prise de
médicaments peut-elle devenir une obsession (via ritualisation)
Q6. Un(e)
bipolaire type 2 peut-il voyager ?
Q7. Lien entre
la bipolarité et la fatigue chronique ou la fibromalgie.
Q8. Un(e) bipo
de type II, a-t-il des risques de conduite maniaque ?
Exceptionnel suite à un virage type
I . 5% des types II virent au type 1 souvent suite à un
traitement antidépresseur le plus souvent.
Un bipo type I peut passer en II suite à un traitement thymorégulateur.
Q9. Régularité
de la prise du lithium.
Les effets indésirables
correspondent au pic plasmatique.
C'est pourquoi on préconise prise unique le soir pour le
theralite 250.
Demie-vie de 24h.
Q10.
Homéopathie et dépression unipolaire.
Q11.
OMEGA3.
Q12. Effet
du soleil sur la sérotonine.
Q13.
Je suis au Lamictal depuis 6 mois. Quel effet sur mon cas ?
Le Lamictal est un
thymorégulateur agissant par le bas (Amm US 2003).
C'est le
meilleur régulateur contre les récidives
dépressives.
Sa prise doit impérativement être progressive pour
éviter les troubles cutanés:
25mg les 15 premiers jours
50 mg les 15 jours suivants
100 mg les 15 jours suivants, etc jusqu'à dose
thérapeutique.
200 mg dose moyenne mais peut aller jusqu'à 400mg.
Ne fait pas grossir et n'entraîne pas de malformations chez la
femme enceinte.
Dans la classification de POST, même efficacité que les
électrochocs.
Peut être associé au lithium, mais non avec la
dépakote ou la dépamide.
Q14. TOC, TP, . quid de TBP
Très Bien Portant
Q15. Prise de poids.
Effet secondaire des antidépresseurs ce qui peut entrîner
une autre dépression.
Pas d'effet : stablon, prozac, lamictal (et azipiprazole)
Peu d'effet : zoloft, seropram
Beaucoup : imipramine, marcilid
Le lithium entraîne souvent un effet hypothyroidien donc une
prise de poids.
Les
médicaments du bonheur. La Recherche
HS n°18 Août
2004 p 24 ISRS Un risque trop vite
effacé. La littérature
médicale a occulté le risque suicidaire
lié aux antidépresseurs. D.
HEALY
Cet
article
analyse de
manière critique l'incidence de la prise des
antidépresseurs modernes
(les IRS) sur le risque suicidaire. Il apparait que les essais
cliniques randomisés ont montré une augmentation
considérable du risque
suicidaire pour le s molécules les plus connues :
PROZAC (par rapport à une
molécule de
comparaison) risque
multiplié par trois
ZOLOFT (par rapport à un placebo)
risque multiplié
par deux
DEROXAT (par rapport à un placebo)
risque multiplié
par sept
Comorbidity in Bipolar Disorder, The Complexity of Diagnosis and Treatment
Doron Sagman, MD and Mauricio Tohen, MD 23 mars 2009 Psychiatric Times.
Dr
Sagman is staff psychiatrist, Toronto East General Hospital, Toronto,
and associate vice-president, clinical research, Eli Lilly Canada Inc,
and Dr Tohen is Distinguished Lilly Scholar for Neurosciences, Lilly
Research Laboratories, Indianapolis. The authors report that they have
no other conflicts of interest concerning the subject matter of this
article.
The central tenet of clinical comorbidity, the
occurrence of 2 syndromes in the same patient, presupposes that they
are distinct categorical entities. By this definition, 2 or more
coexisting syndromes do not negate one another, nor paradoxically does
this coexistence negate the potential for one to influence the course,
outcome, and treatment response of the other. Isolating a syndrome by
characterizing it through a unique pathogenic process allows for
diagnostic fidelity even while acknowledging overlapping phenotypes.
Bipolar
disorder (BPD) is highly prevalent and heterogeneous. Its increasing
complexity is often caused by the presence of comorbid conditions,
which have become the rule rather than the exception. Lifetime
prevalence of psychiatric comorbidity has been reported in community
and clinical studies. Most (95%) of the respondents with BPD in the
National Comorbidity Survey met criteria for 3 or more lifetime
psychiatric disorders.1 In a Stanley Foundation Bipolar Treatment
Outcome Network study of almost 300 patients, 65% met DSM-IV criteria
for at least 1 comorbid Axis I disorder.2
Analogous to models in
medicine (eg, cardiovascular disease), BPD incorporates psychiatric and
medical comorbidities (Table) whose simultaneous treatment is equally
pressing to the core mood disturbance.3 Checks and balances must be
used to address the distressing comorbid condition (eg, anxiety) whose
treatment with an SSRI or serotonin norepinephrine reuptake inhibitor
(SNRI) may catalyze a round of mood cycling in an otherwise stable
patient; a greater degree of protection via mood stabilizers may be
warranted in such an individual to reduce this possibility.
Overall,
the presence of comorbidities in BPD has negative prognostic
implications for psychological health and for medical well-being and
longevity.4-6 The most common comorbid conditions are reviewed below to
help guide the clinician through this diagnostic maze and associated
treatment considerations.
Anxiety
The well-established
relationship between anxiety symptoms and major depressive disorder
usually forges a more complicated course, something that is equally, if
not more, characteristic of bipolar depression.7,8 Recent studies
suggest that rates of anxiety in bipolar depression tend to exceed
those in the general population.1,9,10 In the Systematic Treatment
Enhancement Program for Bipolar Disorder (STEP-BD), lifetime prevalence
for a comorbid anxiety disorder reached 51.2% while rates for a current
anxiety disorder reached 30.5%; comorbid anxiety tended to be more
common in patients with bipolar I disorder compared with bipolar II.11
Anxiety
may be interwoven into the fabric of syndromic bipolarity, may occur
alongside it as a comorbid condition, and may occur in subsyndromal
bipolar states as well.12 Patients with BPD are at higher risk for many
other anxiety subtypes, including generalized anxiety disorder, simple
phobia, social phobia, obsessive-compulsive disorder, posttraumatic
stress disorder, and panic disorder.1,2 Of these, panic disorder
appears to have the highest risk of comorbidity. Panic disorder also
tends to cosegregate with BPD in families with high rates of BPD.13
Panic disorder and anxiety tend to be particularly manifest in bipolar
mixed states, which echoes Emil Kraepelin’s description of mixed states
as “anxious mania” or “excited depression” whereby the “mood is
anxiously despairing.”14,15 Mixed states tend to have an early onset
and are associated with other risks including suicide and substance
abuse.16
n general, anxiety tends to predict an earlier age at
onset of BPD and results in a more complicated and severe disease
course.2,11,17
Aside from an early onset, the parallels to
bipolar mixed states include an increased incidence of suicide,
psychotic features, substance abuse, panic comorbidity, and poor
response to lithium.17 Anxiety and substance abuse are the most
frequent lifetime comorbid disorders in BPD and the presence of
comorbid anxiety further increases the likelihood of substance
abuse.2,18,19 Rates of alcohol dependency can be up to 2-fold higher in
patients with anxiety.11 The risk of suicide is increased in patients
with bipolar depression and comorbid anxiety and/or substance abuse.20
Overall, the presence of anxiety in patients with BPD tends to amplify
or intensify core bipolar symptoms or to aggravate other comorbid
conditions. The course of the illness and response to treatment are
also adversely affected.
Treatment approaches
There are
relatively few studies and no randomized controlled trials that isolate
pharmacological treatment strategies in bipolar patients with comorbid
anxiety.21 Traditional bipolar treatments (such as lithium) tend to be
less effective when anxiety coexists: combination therapy is often
necessary in this setting.10 Anticonvulsants, including valproate,
carbamazepine, lamotrigine, topiramate, gabapentin, and pregabalin,
have been studied in anxiety conditions; there is limited controlled
evidence to support the use of these agents in comorbid anxiety.22
The
efficacy of antidepressant agents, including the SSRIs and SNRIs, has
been extensively demonstrated in anxiety conditions. These agents are
often used to manage anxiety conditions when comorbid with BPD.21
Although controversial, the use of these agents is widespread in
bipolar depression and its associated comorbidities; rapid switching of
moods may be more prominent in the face of early-onset bipolarity,
anxiety comorbidity, and antidepressant activation.23
Therefore,
the challenge in treating BPD comorbidities is to avoid exacerbating
other elements within the comorbid symptom complex—especially the core
mood disturbance.
Second-generation antipsychotic agents,
including olanzapine, risperidone, and quetiapine, have shown direct or
adjunctive benefits in the treatment of anxiety conditions; their
additional role as mood stabilizers, with a relatively protective
effect against bipolar mood switching, may be advantageous for the
patient with comorbidities.22,24 The clinician’s task is to treat the
comorbid anxiety condition (along with its heightened attendant risks)
while first insulating the patient against further destabilization of
the primary mood disorder.
Substance use disorder
As
noted, the added burden of substance use disorder (SUD) to comorbid
anxiety in BPD substantially raises the risk profile of the disorder
while complicating treatment options. Comorbid SUD was found to exist
in 61% of patients with bipolar I disorder and in 48% of bipolar II
patients in the Epidemiologic Catchment Area. These rates are much
higher than the rate of 10% to 20%, respectively, in patients without
the SUD comorbidity and the highest rate within any psychiatric
disorder.25
Reflecting findings from other studies, the most
common SUD appears to be alcohol abuse and dependence.26,27 Research
from the Stanley Foundation Bipolar Network found that the lifetime
prevalence rate of alcohol abuse or dependence was 49% for bipolar men
and 29% for bipolar women. Women with BPD seemed to be at higher risk
for alcoholism than women in the general population.28,29 Whereas
alcoholism in bipolar men may have more of a genetic influence, in
women the risk may be more of an acquired burden related to depressive
illness.29 Depressive symptoms are especially common in female bipolar
patients with comorbid alcohol abuse.30
The phenomenological and
treatment course of bipolar illness is significantly affected by
comorbid SUD.31 As with other comorbidities, substance use may start
before presentation of actual bipolar symptoms, and may obscure the
mood diagnosis.32 The temporal onset of substance abuse and bipolar
disorder may also reflect different clinical courses.33
In
general, higher rates of mood lability, rapid cycling, mixed episodes,
suicidality, and other medical conditions complicate BPD and affect
recovery times as well as rates of remission during
hospitalization.34,35 There is also the risk of violent behavior with
comorbid substance abuse.19 Impulsivity is an overlapping and
overarching feature of bipolar and substance use disorders, and it
further complicates the course of the illness.36 Comorbid substance
abuse is also a significant contributor to treatment nonadherence in
patients with bipolar disorder. Its presence confounds attempts at
symptomatic and functional recovery.31
Treatment approaches.
Unfortunately, there are few controlled data on the pharmacotherapeutic
management of comorbid SUD and BPD. Response to lithium is generally
poor in patients with BPD comorbid with alcohol abuse, although it is
not clear whether this relates to nonadherence or the association with
mixed states.29,34
Anticonvulsants (eg, valproate, topiramate,
carbamazepine, and lamo-trigine) have shown a favorable effect in
decreasing use of alcohol and cocaine.37-40 In another study, treatment
with valproate or carbamazepine was more likely to induce remission in
hospitalized bipolar patients with histories of substance abuse other
than lithium.34 A major concern with these agents, however, is
balancing the treatment effects with the potential for hepatic,
hematological, and other adverse effects, especially in this
susceptible patient population.
Second-generation antipsychotic
agents, including quetiapine and aripiprazole, reduced drug use and
craving in small open-label studies.41,42
Treatment of comorbid
BPD and SUD invariably requires an integrated approach that focuses on
both disorders simultaneously, and incorporates both psychotherapy and
pharmacotherapy. This dual-disorder approach incorporates case
management, vocational rehabilitation, individual and family
counselling, housing, and medications.43-44
Attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder
Kraepelin’s
insight into the onset and atypical phenomenology of BPD in
childhood/adolescence was not fully acknowledged until recently.15
Despite the lack of a formal nosology in this age group, a 2001 NIMH
consensus conference affirmed the existence and potential diagnosis of
BPD in prepubertal children.45 This atypical mixed-state phenotype
seems to overlap with symptoms of attention-deficit/hyperactivity
disorder (ADHD), which include irritability, impulsivity,
distractibility, overactivity, rapid speech, and emotional lability.
The overlap generates the need for diagnostic precision or the
determination of a separate comorbid condition. The lack of diagnostic
tools and the overlap of these disorders with conduct disorder and
oppositional defiant disorder adds to the diagnostic confusion.
Irritability, for example, cuts across all diagnostic categories and is
a poor differentiator.46
Not withstanding this ambiguity and the
lack of large epidemiological studies, there is general agreement
regarding the co-occurrence of BPD and ADHD.47 In a recent review,
Singh and colleagues48 found a bidirectional relationship between the
2: ADHD occurred in up to 85% of children with BPD, and BPD occurred in
up to 22% of children with ADHD. The authors further explored 4
hypotheses:
• BPD symptoms lead to overdiagnosis of ADHD in youth.
• ADHD is a prodromal or early manifestation of childhood BPD.
• ADHD is treated with psychostimulants that trigger the onset of childhood BPD.
• ADHD and BPD share an underlying biological mechanism (ie, common familial, genetic, or neurophysiological).
Despite
limitations, current literature best supports the second
hypothesis—that ADHD may be a marker of the development of early-onset
BPD. Ultimately, longitudinal controlled studies are needed to help us
diagnose this disorder more precisely and to manage it rationally.
Pharmacological studies may offer insights into the efficacy of mood
stabilizers and/or the failure of psychostimulants; conversely, the
induction of bipolar symptoms with psychostimulants or antidepressants
may also be instructive.
Personality disorders
As
with the comorbid conditions discussed earlier, the presence of a
comorbid personality disorder complicates diagnostic interpretation and
treatment decisions.49 Marked personality disorder–related symptoms may
also negatively influence the outcome of the bipolar illness.50 The
severity of residual mood symptoms in bipolar patients with personality
disorders differs from that in bipolar patients without personality
disorders—even during periods of remission.49
Features of a
personality disorder may overlap with a bipolar mood episode.51 It may
therefore be too challenging to diagnose a personality disorder until
the mood episode has been successfully treated. A careful personal and
collateral history may be most instructive in establishing the presence
of personality traits that predate the onset of a discreet mood
disturbance. Conversely, personality features that endure after the
resolution of a mood episode may reveal the comorbid condition. A
positive family history of a mood disorder and antidepressant-induced
mood elevation also serve as important clues.
A recent study
found that cluster B (borderline, narcissistic, antisocial, histrionic)
personality disorder features were evident in about one-third of
bipolar patients, with possible associations to childhood emotional
and/or physical abuse.52 An independent, elevated lifetime risk of
suicide was attributed to cluster B comorbidity. Recent literature
advocates a more careful approach to diagnosing borderline personality
disorder in the face of the mood-cycling pattern seen in bipolar II
disorder; a cyclothymic temperament has been proposed as the underlying
feature of this atypical mood, anxiety, impulsivity continuum.53,54
Clearly,
treatment of this comorbid subtype requires a greater degree of finesse
in the integration of psychotherapeutic and psychopharma-cological
modalities—especially in restoring functionality and ensuring
compliance. Again, mood stabilization with lithium appears less
effective than anticonvulsants, such as valproate or lamotrigine, in
this comorbid population.55-57 Second generation antipsychotics
(olanzapine, risperidone) have also played a role in improving symptoms
and regulating affective lability.58-61
Medical comorbidities
Cardiovascular
disease, type 2 diabetes mellitus, and other endocrine disorders tend
to occur more often in patients with BPD than in the general
population.62,63 According to population-based studies, cardiovascular
mortality is almost twice as high in patients with BPD, which may be
related to higher rates of obesity.5,64 Mechanisms hypothesized to
explain this finding include smoking, diet, sedentary lifestyle, and
unrecognized risk factors (insulin resistance, inflammation,
hypercortisolemia).65,66
Comorbid neurological disorders,
including migraine headache, have also been reported at higher rates in
patients with BPD, especially bipolar II disorder. The latter may
represent a subtype of the disease.67
Conclusion
Given
the substantial overlap between symptoms of BPD and other psychiatric
conditions, an accurate cross-sectional assessment is inherently
difficult to achieve. A careful longitudinal assessment that
establishes a chronology of onset of different conditions, a symptom
and functional profile between mood episodes, the course of illness,
and response to treatment are essential for a more robust diagnosis.44
Furthermore, the inherent challenge in obtaining an accurate history
from a bipolar patient—especially one with comorbidities—requires
corroboration from family members.
Although clinical guidelines
for BPD acknowledge the complexity of treating the illness, most have
limited recommendations specific to the patient with comorbidities.
This may reflect the limited nature of the clinical evidence in this
field.68,69 The cost of diagnostic and therapeutic uncertainty,
however, is calculated through the high cost of chronicity, with
elevated rates of suicide, legal and interpersonal difficulties, and
repeated hospitalizations.
As the field of neurobiology of
bipolar and affective disorders advances, we hope to begin to refine
our view of the comorbid interface. Forging the pathophysiological
links between specific medical illnesses and BPD, including the use of
clinical biomarkers to help refine the understanding of bipolar
subtypes, may help clarify the pathophysiology of BPD itself. This will
ultimately suggest new measures for secondary prevention and long-term
treatments.4,70
Drugs Mentioned in This Article
Aripiprazole (Abilify)
Carbamazepine (Carbatrol, Tegretol, others)
Gabapentin (Neurontin)
Lamotrigine (Lamictal)
Lithium (Eskalith, Lithane, Lithobid)
Olanzapine (Zyprexa)
Pregabalin (Lyrica)
Quetiapine (Seroquel)
Risperidone (Risperdal)
Topiramate (Topamax)
Valproate/valproic acid (Depakote, others)
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