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“Bipolar?” drug abuse? or something else?

A funny thing about bipolar -well, perhaps not “funny” but certainly very intriguing – is that the symptoms look a lot like cocaine addiction. Just to be clear, here are some symptoms of mania:

  • going for days without sleep
  • high energy levels
  • talking fast, words spilling out
  • delusions of grandeur
  • promiscuity
  • aggression

… and here are some symptoms of cocaine abuse:

  • going for days without sleep
  • high energy levels
  • talking fast, words spilling out
  • delusions of grandeur
  • promiscuity
  • aggression

See the similarity? To blur the line even more, drug abuse is considered to be a symptom of a manic episode! The question, then, is how a doctor, faced with a patient who has been taking cocaine and exhibiting manic symptoms, can say that the patient is experiencing a manic episode, rather than drawing the more banal conclusion that the patient is just doing too many drugs. Yet many doctors make a bipolar diagnosis in exactly this high-uncertainty situation.

These concerns have been raised in the psychiatric literature. For example, the Journal of Clinical Psychiatry published two articles in 2008 that found widespread over-diagnosis of bipolar. In a systematic study of people with dual diagnosis of bipolar and substance abuse, only 33% were actually bipolar according to a structured DSM interview.
And a large scale study over 4 years of psychiatric outpatients found that less than half those who were diagnosed with bipolar could be classified as bipolar i or bipolar ii.

The most common situations where misdiagnosis occurred were major depression; borderline personality disorder; and substance abuse.

In a letter in Psychiatric Services, Dr Burton Hutto of the University of North Carolina drew attention to problems with the self-reports that are so often a critical part of diagnosis. He said:

Patients may overendorse manic symptoms for a variety of psychological reasons or they may misunderstand the severity of symptoms the clinician is looking for. For example, simple inquiries into whether a patient’s thoughts ever “race” can receive a range of replies depending on the patient’s subjective grasp of the word “race.”

The nice thing about a bipolar, for a doctor, is that treatment is straightforward: the patient needs to take the right drugs, and that’s about it. For personality disorders, talk therapy is needed, something that doctors don’t know much about. And drug addiction is a messy business for which there are often no easy answers.

If you have been diagnosed as bipolar, look into it. Your doctor could be wrong.

Posted August 22nd, 2009 by David