Predictors of trait aggression in bipolar disorder
β Scribed by Jessica L Garno; Nisali Gunawardane; Joseph F Goldberg
- Book ID
- 110906381
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 2008
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 106 KB
- Volume
- 10
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 1398-5647
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
Objectives: Although aggressive behavior has been associated with bipolar disorder (BD), it has also been linked with developmental factors and disorders frequently found to be comorbid with BD, making it unclear whether or not it represents an underlying biological disturbance intrinsic to bipolar illness. We therefore sought to identify predictors of trait aggression in a sample of adults with BD.
Methods: Subjects were 100 bipolar I (nβ=β73) or II (nβ=β27) patients consecutively evaluated in the Bipolar Disorders Research Program of the New York Presbyterian HospitalβPayne Whitney Clinic. Diagnoses were established using the Structured Clinical Interview for the DSMβIV (SCIDβI) and Cluster B sections of the SCIDβII. Mood severity was rated by the Hamilton Depression Rating Scale (HDRS) and Young Mania Rating Scale (YMRS). Histories of childhood maltreatment were assessed via the Childhood Trauma Questionnaire (CTQ), while trait aggression was measured by the BrownβGoodwin Aggression Scale (BGA).
Results: In univariate analyses, significant relationships were observed between total BGA scores and CTQ total (rβ=β0.326, pβ=β0.001), childhood emotional abuse (rβ=β0.417, pβ<β0.001), childhood physical abuse (rβ=β0.231, pβ=β0.024), childhood emotional neglect (rβ=β0.293, pβ=β0.004), postβtraumatic stress disorder (tβ=ββ2.843, pβ=β0.005), substance abuse/dependence (tβ=ββ2.914, pβ=β0.004), antisocial personality disorder (tβ=ββ2.722, pβ=β0.008) and borderline personality disorder (tβ=ββ5.680, pβ<β0.001) as well as current HDRS (rβ=β0.397, pβ<β0.001) and YMRS scores (rβ=β0.371, pβ<β0.001). Stepwise multiple regression revealed that trait aggression was significantly associated with: (i) diagnoses of comorbid borderline personality disorder (pβ<β0.001); (ii) depressive symptoms (pβ=β0.001); and (iii) manic symptoms (pβ<β0.001).
Conclusions: Comorbid borderline personality disorder and current manic and depressive symptoms each significantly predicted trait aggression in BD, while controlling for confounding factors. The findings have implications for nosologic distinctions between bipolar and borderline personality disorders, and the developmental pathogenesis of comorbid personality disorders as predisposing to aggression in patients with BD.
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