Article

Emerging trends in the treatment of rapid cycling bipolar disorder: a selected review

Biological Psychiatry Branch, National Institute of Mental Health, NIH, Bethesda, MD, USA
Bipolar Disorders (impact factor: 5.29). 11/2000; 2(4):305 - 315. DOI:10.1034/j.1399-5618.2000.020403.x pp.305 - 315

ABSTRACT Recent evidence suggests that lithium therapy (even as supplemented by antidepressants and neuroleptics) is inadequate for the majority of patients with bipolar illness, and particularly those with rapid cycling. Valproate and carbamazepine have emerged as adjuncts and alternatives, but they, too, often require additional approaches with lithium, thyroid hormones, and other putative mood stabilizers, including nimodipine (and related dihydropyridine calcium channel blockers), lamotrigine, gabapentin, topiramate, and the atypical neuroleptics. Evaluating how these agents and the unimodal antidepressants are optimally applied and sequenced in the treatment of bipolar illness with its multiple subtypes, patterns and comorbidities will require much future investigation and the development of new methodological clinical trial approaches.

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Keywords

additional approaches
 
adjuncts
 
agents
 
bipolar illness
 
dihydropyridine calcium channel blockers
 
future investigation
 
gabapentin
 
multiple subtypes
 
new methodological clinical trial approaches
 
putative mood stabilizers
 
rapid cycling
 
Recent evidence
 
sequenced
 
thyroid hormones