Article

Extreme positive and negative appraisals of activated states interact to discriminate bipolar disorder from unipolar depression and non-clinical controls

Details

Citation

Kelly RE, Mansell W, Wood AM, Alatiq Y, Dodd A & Searson R (2011) Extreme positive and negative appraisals of activated states interact to discriminate bipolar disorder from unipolar depression and non-clinical controls. Journal of Affective Disorders, 134 (1-3), pp. 438-443. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jad.2011.05.042

Abstract
Background: This research aimed to test whether positive, negative, or conflicting appraisals about activated mood states (e.g., energetic and high states) predicted bipolar disorder. Methods: A sample of individuals from clinical and control groups (171 with bipolar disorder, 42 with unipolar depression, and 64 controls) completed a measure of appraisals of internal states. Results: High negative appraisals related to a higher likelihood of bipolar disorder irrespective of positive appraisals. High positive appraisals related to a higher likelihood of bipolar disorder only when negative appraisals were also high. Individuals were most likely to have bipolar disorder, as opposed to unipolar depression or no diagnosis, when they endorsed both extremely positive and extremely negative appraisals of the same, activated states. Limitations: Appraisals of internal states were based on self-report. Conclusions: The results indicate that individuals with bipolar disorder tend to appraise activated, energetic internal states in opposing or conflicting ways, interpreting these states as both extremely positive and extremely negative. This may lead to contradictory attempts to regulate these states, which may in turn contribute to mood swing symptoms. Psychological therapy for mood swings and bipolar disorder should address extreme and conflicting appraisals of mood states.

Keywords
Bipolar disorder; Activation; Appraisals; Mood swings; Bipolar Disorder; Depression; Manic-depressive illness

Journal
Journal of Affective Disorders: Volume 134, Issue 1-3

StatusPublished
Publication date30/11/2011
URLhttp://hdl.handle.net/1893/12206
PublisherElsevier for the International Society for Affective Disorders
ISSN0165-0327