Behavioral Health

Bipolar disorder: Making the Dx, selecting the right Rx

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Patient questionnaires and certain lab tests can help rule out other diagnoses and establish baselines before giving psychotropics. Empiric Tx is warranted in some cases.


 

References

THE CASE

A 23-year-old woman seeks medical attention at the request of her boyfriend because she’s been “miserable” for 3 weeks. In the examination room, she slouches in the chair and says her mood is low, her grades have dropped, and she no longer enjoys social gatherings or her other usual activities. She has no thoughts of suicide, no weight loss, and no somatic symptoms.

She says she is generally healthy, does not take any regular medications, and has never been pregnant. When asked about previous similar episodes, she admits to feeling this way about 3 times a year for one to 2 months at a time. She has tried different antidepressants, which haven’t helped much and have made her irritable and interfered with sleep.

When asked about mania or hypomania, she says there are short periods, roughly a couple of weeks 2 or 3 times a year, when she will get a lot of work done and can get by with little sleep. She has never gone on “spending sprees,” though, or indulged in any other unusual or dangerous behavior. And she has never been hospitalized for symptoms.

HOW WOULD YOU PROCEED WITH THIS PATIENT?

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