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Journal Article

Citation

Neria Y, Bromet EJ, Carlson GA, Naz B. Acta Psychiatr. Scand. 2005; 111(5): 380-383.

Affiliation

Department of Psychiatry, Columbia University and Anxiety Disorder Clinic, New York State Psychiatric Institute, NY 10032, USA. ny126@columbia.edu

Copyright

(Copyright © 2005, John Wiley and Sons)

DOI

10.1111/j.1600-0447.2005.00530.x

PMID

15819732

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: Little is known about the relationship of assaultive trauma to clinical and functional outcome in patients with bipolar disorder. METHOD: We assessed trauma histories in a cohort of 109 first-admission bipolar patients with psychosis using structured interviews and medical records. Assaultive trauma included rape, physical attacks, and physical threats. Outcome was assessed using standardized ratings. RESULTS: Forty percent reported a history of assaultive trauma, mostly in childhood (< or =16 years). Exposed patients were more symptomatic at each follow-up than unexposed. Sixteen percent of exposed patients remitted after one episode compared with 38.5% of the non-exposed. Patients exposed as adults were the most symptomatic at 6 months, while patients exposed in childhood were the most symptomatic at 24 months. CONCLUSION: Our findings supported the salient role of trauma history as a risk factor for poor course in severe bipolar disorder. Given the high prevalence of such exposure, clinical awareness in first-admission psychotic bipolar patients is critical.


Language: en

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