Jane Pauley Discloses Bipolar Disorder
Pauley's Book: Steroid
Treatment, Antidepressants Unmasked Mood-Swing Illness..
cont. from page 1
"It is unusual to be diagnosed with bipolar disorder so late in life,"
Raison says. "Fifty is definitely old, but the average time from a first
episode of bipolar disorder to a correct diagnosis averages eight to 10
years. So most people are not diagnosed, or are diagnosed with
unipolar
depression. This is more likely for women, who are more likely to have their
first episode of bipolar disorder as depression."
And when bipolar disorder goes unrecognized, an experience like Pauley's
is not uncommon.
"There is no doubt that steroids can make people manic," Raison says.
"Sometimes they make people depressed, sometimes they make people irritable
and wired, and sometimes they make them
euphorically manic. ... It is not
just steroids, but
antidepressants, too. All of us in psychiatry have seen
first-episode mania after putting a person on antidepressants. Most people
with antidepressant-induced mania will go on to have the disease
spontaneously generate itself in future mood swings. Whether it is just a
canary in the coal mine signaling a person's vulnerability, or whether the
drugs cause harm, is not known."
That's why it's important for doctors to find out whether a patient's
depression is bipolar before putting them on antidepressants, says Dorothy
K.Y. Sit, MD, assistant professor at the University of Pittsburgh's Western
Psychiatric Institute and Women's Behavioral Health Care clinic.
"If we have a patient who has, in fact, an [unrecognized] underlying
bipolar disorder, the patient is treated with a single agent antidepressant
without properly addressing the bipolar component of the illness," Sit
says. "It may help at first. But the risk is we can induce not just mania
but mixed mania with symptoms of both mania and depression."
Multiple Treatments Available
Lithium -- to which Pauley is reported to be responding -- is the initial
treatment for bipolar disorder. If patients can tolerate the drug, it can
exert a powerful mood-stabilizing effect. It works for up to half of all
patients with bipolar disorder, Sit says.
Some patients may get better results with
valproate than with lithium.
Controlling manic episodes often requires another drug. For this, the
seizure drug Depakote can be useful. Recently, doctors have begun to
prescribe a class of drugs known as
atypical antipsychotics: Zyprexa,
Abilify, Risperdal, and Geodon.
"They started as anti-schizophrenia treatments but now appear to work
very well for bipolar disorder," Raison says. "And they work very well for
acute manias and for maintenance. They all have different side effect
profiles. So there is a growing armamentarium of useful agents."
After getting psychiatric drugs, patients generally benefit from
psychotherapy to help manage the illness and associated difficulties.
The important thing is for people with bipolar disorder to get diagnosed
and treated. There's no cure for bipolar disorder, so patients must remain
on treatment for the rest of their lives.
"The most important thing is finding a treatment that works, one you can
tolerate, that you can commit to taking for an extended period," Raison
says. "It is like diabetes. If you want to avoid these devastating episodes,
you will be on these drugs for an indefinite period. It is a lifetime
condition. And as a person gets older, there is a tendency to have more
episodes, with more depressions and fewer manias. It is a bad deal. And
there is growing social dysfunction. If left untreated, bipolar disorder
causes alterations in the brain not conducive to optimal functioning in
life. So it is important to find a drug that works and that one can stay
on."
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