The term ‘switching’ is often used in bipolar disorder when describing polarity changes in bipolar disorder, but this term is ambiguous and imprecise, and is sometimes used interchangeably with the term ‘cycling’. Furthermore, polarity changes in bipolar disorder can be understood in different ways, because their clinical manifestations range from the emergence of subthreshold symptoms to a full episode of the opposite pole. Besides the need to tighten the meaning of the term ‘switching’, this paper also argues that switching does not adequately describe the complex phenomena that occur with course aggravation of bipolar disorder, such as alteration in episode frequency or amplitude. A more-fine grained a...
Objective To identify risk factors associated with cycle acceleration (CA), that is, progressive dec...
Objectives: It has been reported that first episode polarity affected the course and the prognosis o...
IMPORTANCE Increased activity and energy alongside mood change are identified in the DSM-5 as car...
The term 'switching' is often used in bipolar disorder when describing polarity changes in bipolar d...
Bipolar disorder is a common, highly heritable mental disorder that is characterized by cyclical alt...
Bipolar disorder (BD) is a unique disorder that transcends domains of function since the same patien...
Bipolar disorder, or manic-depressive illness, is a mood disorder in which episodes of mania, hypoma...
Bipolar disorder is a complex disorder with multi-dimensional phenotypes across axes of mood, cognit...
OBJECTIVE: This prospective study aims to determine if patients with bipolar disorder with a continu...
OBJECTIVES: Via an international panel of experts, this paper attempts to document, review, interpre...
Objectives:Via an international panel of experts, this paper attempts to document, review, interpret...
OBJECTIVE: This study's aim was to test the validity of rapid cycling, defined by criteria consiste...
Objective: To address whether switch of depression into hypomania or mania or cycle acceleration in ...
Obje ctive: To identify risk factors associated with cycle acceleration (CA), that is, progressive d...
Bipolar disorder, or manic-depressive illness, is a mood disorder in which episodes of mania, hypoma...
Objective To identify risk factors associated with cycle acceleration (CA), that is, progressive dec...
Objectives: It has been reported that first episode polarity affected the course and the prognosis o...
IMPORTANCE Increased activity and energy alongside mood change are identified in the DSM-5 as car...
The term 'switching' is often used in bipolar disorder when describing polarity changes in bipolar d...
Bipolar disorder is a common, highly heritable mental disorder that is characterized by cyclical alt...
Bipolar disorder (BD) is a unique disorder that transcends domains of function since the same patien...
Bipolar disorder, or manic-depressive illness, is a mood disorder in which episodes of mania, hypoma...
Bipolar disorder is a complex disorder with multi-dimensional phenotypes across axes of mood, cognit...
OBJECTIVE: This prospective study aims to determine if patients with bipolar disorder with a continu...
OBJECTIVES: Via an international panel of experts, this paper attempts to document, review, interpre...
Objectives:Via an international panel of experts, this paper attempts to document, review, interpret...
OBJECTIVE: This study's aim was to test the validity of rapid cycling, defined by criteria consiste...
Objective: To address whether switch of depression into hypomania or mania or cycle acceleration in ...
Obje ctive: To identify risk factors associated with cycle acceleration (CA), that is, progressive d...
Bipolar disorder, or manic-depressive illness, is a mood disorder in which episodes of mania, hypoma...
Objective To identify risk factors associated with cycle acceleration (CA), that is, progressive dec...
Objectives: It has been reported that first episode polarity affected the course and the prognosis o...
IMPORTANCE Increased activity and energy alongside mood change are identified in the DSM-5 as car...