Co-morbidity in bipolar disorder: A retrospective study

Background: Bipolar disorder is a relatively common, long-term, and disabling psychiatric illness that is associated with high levels of functional impairment, morbidity, mortality, and an increased risk of suicide. Psychiatric co-morbidity in bipolar disorder ranges from 57.3% to 74.3%, whereas med...

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Main Authors: Ravindra Neelakanthappa Munoli, Samir Kumar Praharaj, Podila Satya Venkata Narasimha Sharma
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SAGE Publishing 2014-01-01
Series:Indian Journal of Psychological Medicine
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.ijpm.info/article.asp?issn=0253-7176;year=2014;volume=36;issue=3;spage=270;epage=275;aulast=Munoli
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spelling doaj-2e79484610d2465e8352b8c483e0adb72021-08-02T07:55:09ZengSAGE PublishingIndian Journal of Psychological Medicine0253-71762014-01-0136327027510.4103/0253-7176.135377Co-morbidity in bipolar disorder: A retrospective studyRavindra Neelakanthappa MunoliSamir Kumar PraharajPodila Satya Venkata Narasimha SharmaBackground: Bipolar disorder is a relatively common, long-term, and disabling psychiatric illness that is associated with high levels of functional impairment, morbidity, mortality, and an increased risk of suicide. Psychiatric co-morbidity in bipolar disorder ranges from 57.3% to 74.3%, whereas medical co-morbidity varies from 2.7-70%. Indian scenario in this aspect is not clear. Materials and Methods: The objective was to ascertain the prevalence of physical and psychiatric co-morbidities in patients attending a tertiary care center over a period of 1 year and its relationship with socio-demographic and clinical variables. One hundred and twenty-five case record files were included in the review. OPCRIT software was used for re-establishing the diagnosis of bipolar disorder, which yielded 120 cases. A semi-structured pro-forma, specifically designed for the study, was used to collect the socio-demographic and clinical details. Results: Co-morbid psychiatric disorders were found in 52 (43.3%) of the sample, whereas co-morbid physical illness was present in 77 (64.2%) patients. The most common psychiatric disorder associated was substance use disorder (27.5%), whereas co-morbid cardiovascular disorder was the most frequent physical diagnosis in the sample (20%). Discussion: The prevalence of co-morbid psychiatric disorders in bipolar patients was lower than that reported in western literature. It could be related to retrospective nature of study or reflect true lower prevalence rates. Also, certain disorders such as eating disorders were absent in our sample, and migraine diagnosis was very infrequent.http://www.ijpm.info/article.asp?issn=0253-7176;year=2014;volume=36;issue=3;spage=270;epage=275;aulast=MunoliBipolar disorder; co-morbidity; mood disorder
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Ravindra Neelakanthappa Munoli
Samir Kumar Praharaj
Podila Satya Venkata Narasimha Sharma
spellingShingle Ravindra Neelakanthappa Munoli
Samir Kumar Praharaj
Podila Satya Venkata Narasimha Sharma
Co-morbidity in bipolar disorder: A retrospective study
Indian Journal of Psychological Medicine
Bipolar disorder; co-morbidity; mood disorder
author_facet Ravindra Neelakanthappa Munoli
Samir Kumar Praharaj
Podila Satya Venkata Narasimha Sharma
author_sort Ravindra Neelakanthappa Munoli
title Co-morbidity in bipolar disorder: A retrospective study
title_short Co-morbidity in bipolar disorder: A retrospective study
title_full Co-morbidity in bipolar disorder: A retrospective study
title_fullStr Co-morbidity in bipolar disorder: A retrospective study
title_full_unstemmed Co-morbidity in bipolar disorder: A retrospective study
title_sort co-morbidity in bipolar disorder: a retrospective study
publisher SAGE Publishing
series Indian Journal of Psychological Medicine
issn 0253-7176
publishDate 2014-01-01
description Background: Bipolar disorder is a relatively common, long-term, and disabling psychiatric illness that is associated with high levels of functional impairment, morbidity, mortality, and an increased risk of suicide. Psychiatric co-morbidity in bipolar disorder ranges from 57.3% to 74.3%, whereas medical co-morbidity varies from 2.7-70%. Indian scenario in this aspect is not clear. Materials and Methods: The objective was to ascertain the prevalence of physical and psychiatric co-morbidities in patients attending a tertiary care center over a period of 1 year and its relationship with socio-demographic and clinical variables. One hundred and twenty-five case record files were included in the review. OPCRIT software was used for re-establishing the diagnosis of bipolar disorder, which yielded 120 cases. A semi-structured pro-forma, specifically designed for the study, was used to collect the socio-demographic and clinical details. Results: Co-morbid psychiatric disorders were found in 52 (43.3%) of the sample, whereas co-morbid physical illness was present in 77 (64.2%) patients. The most common psychiatric disorder associated was substance use disorder (27.5%), whereas co-morbid cardiovascular disorder was the most frequent physical diagnosis in the sample (20%). Discussion: The prevalence of co-morbid psychiatric disorders in bipolar patients was lower than that reported in western literature. It could be related to retrospective nature of study or reflect true lower prevalence rates. Also, certain disorders such as eating disorders were absent in our sample, and migraine diagnosis was very infrequent.
topic Bipolar disorder; co-morbidity; mood disorder
url http://www.ijpm.info/article.asp?issn=0253-7176;year=2014;volume=36;issue=3;spage=270;epage=275;aulast=Munoli
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