Diagnosis and Treatment
of Bipolar Disorder
online conference transcript
Dr. Ronald Fieve: is a widely recognized authority in the treatment
of bipolar disorder and author of the books "Moodswing" and "Prozac". He is a specialist in diagnosing and
treating bipolar disorder.
David: is the
HealthyPlace.com moderator.
The people in green: are audience
members.
BEGINNING
David: Good Evening. I'm David
Roberts. I'm the moderator for tonight's conference. I want to
welcome everyone to HealthyPlace.com. Our conference tonight is on
"Diagnosing and Treating Bipolar
Disorder". We are fortunate to have a great guest, Dr.
Ronald Fieve.
I'm sure many of you have heard of Dr. Fieve. He is the author of the
best-selling books, "Moodswing" and "Prozac". He's widely recognized as an authority
in the treatment of bipolar disorder. In addition, Dr. Fieve operates one
of the largest clinical trial centers for new antidepressants coming on the
market.
Good Evening Dr. Fieve and welcome to
HealthyPlace.com. Thank you for agreeing to be our
guest. Because our visitors have different levels of understanding, could
you please define what bipolar disorder, manic depression is?
Dr. Fieve: It is classified by the
American Psychiatric Association, using the research criteria of the diagnostic
and statistical manual (DSM4), as a major, and one of the world's major, mental
illnesses characterized by mild to wild swings in mood and behaviour, going
from elation to depression.
David: From the conferences that we've
held here, one thing I've come to understand is that some psychiatric illnesses
are difficult to diagnose. How is bipolar diagnosed?
Dr. Fieve: There are no biochemical
blood tests used to diagnose bipolar illness, like there is to diagnose
diabetes and other medical conditions. It is diagnosed by a psychiatrist,
psychopharmacologist expert, preferably using the DSM4 criteria, and taking an
extensive family history and personal history of the patient's mood and
behavior over his or her lifetime.
David: And because there are no tests,
per se, is that why some people, over the course of their lifetime, can be
diagnosed with, let's say, ADHD (Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder) and
later the diagnosis is changed to Bipolar?
Dr. Fieve: Yes - an expert in the fields
of these two illnesses, most often can distinguish between the two and make the
correct diagnosis. Of course, the two illnesses can exist in the same
patient which I have at times seen, requiring treatment for ADHD and bipolar at
the same time. ADHD generally comes on in the very early years of
childhood and early teens, where bipolar comes on in the early to mid-twenties,
but there is no fixed rule for this. When in doubt as to the diagnosis,
the family history of bipolar is very helpful in clinching the bipolar
diagnosis in the patient, and leading thus to the primary treatment for bipolar
instead of putting the patient on Ritalin for ADHD. ADHD is much
harder to diagnose, and much less is known about it. And Ritalin, of
course, is addictive, unlike the anti-bipolar drugs, which in adults is safer
for a first trial, if the diagnosis remains in question by an expert.
David: I imagine it must be more
difficult to diagnose children with bipolar than it is an adult. Is that
true?
Dr. Fieve: Of course, YES. I would
be very careful about it, but less so if there is a strong family history of
bipolar, suicide, alcohol, great achievement, or gambling.
David: Is bipolar disorder genetically
based, and is it hereditary?
Dr. Fieve: Yes. Genetic studies of
bipolar illness, many of which I have participated in at Columbia Presbyterian
Medical Center, show that bipolar illness is predominately a genetically
inherited illness. It has a spectrum of manifestations in the children
and relatives including depression alone, alcohol, suicide, gambling, great
achievement and bipolar illness, like I said above. Genetically, we say
that there is a gene-gene and a gene-environmental interaction, so that not
100% of bipolar can be considered genetic. We also call it a
multifactural genetic illness.
David: Here are some audience questions:
michelle1: My boyfriend and I are both
bipolar. Would you recommend us not to have children of our own?
Dr. Fieve: I would recommend that you
make a decision based on the knowledge of all the facts and a few visits with a
genetic counselor who is an expert in this field. After all is said and
done, the genetic counselor can only give you statistical likelihood in
percentages, and no-one can tell you that you absolutely won't have one, two,
or three, perfectly normal children. It is simply that your risk of
having a bipolar child is higher than if only one of you had it. And it
would be lower still, if none of you had it. Don't try to outguess God
and make you own decision based on the facts. The likelihood is higher
than if only one of you had it, but as you know many people with bipolar
illness are the movers and shakers of the world and make great contributions to
the arts, science and business.
Hayley: I am 13 and my father is
bipolar, he was also a alcoholic, and he is trying to get better. I hate
how he acts and how my mom always talks about it with other people on the
internet in the bipolar
chatrooms, so I get mad at her. How can I help my dad and make my mom
stay off the chat. It hurts me that she talks about it.
Dr. Fieve: You need two things: a father
who is motivated to change via the correct treatment, and a psychiatrist who is
an expert in the field and who will treat him. Many motivated people
cannot find a bipolar expert, and many bipolar experts simply don't see the
patients who need them and would benefit by their knowledge and treatment
skills. Your mother should get him to a board-certified
psychopharmacologist, preferably University affiliated, for an initial
consultation and then go from there. And hopefully your father will go.
David: And that's an excellent point Dr.
Fieve. How does one go about finding an "expert" in bipolar
disorder?
Dr. Fieve: My first answer to this would
be to call the department of psychiatry Chairman's Office in the nearest
University of the state you are in. From there, you can get a referral
from that office if you cannot go to the University centre itself. Go to
the bipolar expert on the faculty for an initial consultation and get a
referral if need be to a low-cost clinic or private psychiatrist thereafter.
David: Here's an audience comment, then
I want to get into the treatment aspect:
CLIFF: It took me about 6 doctors and 2
full years before I was diagnosed. That was 22 yrs ago. I'm 58 now.
David: What is the most effective
treatment for an adult who has bipolar disorder?
Dr. Fieve: First of all, I hear Cliff's
history two or three times a week when I do consultations on patients for the
first time. It often is much worse and I sometimes hear that patients
have been going from doctor to doctor, and from therapist to therapist for over
20 years, without the proper diagnosis and bipolar treatment. According
to my own experience, over 30 years and 5000 patients, Lithium is still my
first choice for treating classical bipolar illness. This is agreed on by
Dr. Mogens Schou, in Denmark who preceded Lithium studies before me, and by Dr.
Gershon in Michigan who also started work with Lithium in the late 1950's and
early 60's like I did at Columbia. Furthermore, the top
psychopharmacologist at Harvard, Dr. Baldessorini, also agrees that Lithium
should be tried in most cases in classic manic depression first.
Thereafter, we have Lithium alternative (3 - 4), which in fewer instances are
the treatment of first choice, i.e. if the patient has failed on Lithium, has
kidney problems, alopecia (hair loss) or any other side-effects. Hair
loss with Lithium is very rare
David: And correct me if I'm wrong Dr.
Fieve, but you were one of the first doctors in the U.S. to do Lithium studies
and promote Lithium for treatment of Bipolar Disorder. Am I correct?
Dr. Fieve: Yes, I was. And my team
at the New York State Psychiatric Institute and Columbia Presbyterian Medical
Centre, was the first American psychiatric and team to do scientific studies of
Lithium in manic depression. Dr. Schow preceded me in Denmark and Dr.
Cade was the very first in Australia in 1949. Dr. Schou's work was in
1954 and I began trials in 1958.
David: Here's an audience question:
scooby: Is there a particular reason why
you and Dr. Baldessorini prefer lithium to other medications as a priority?
Dr. Fieve: My reason is, that after
seeing about 5000 bipolar patients and using Lithium and the alternative
antiepilectic drugs (Depakote, Tegretal, Lamictal) and now possibly Topomax,
(the latter two have not been thoroughly studied, but we are doing trials), I
feel that Lithium is superior and has the most scientifically proven
documentation in extensive clinical trials that it works, compared to the
alternatives. You have to know what you are doing with Lithium, and
you have to have considerable experience in treating a number of patients over
time with it; since, if used in excess, it can cause toxicity and if used too
little, the illness is not stabilized. On the other hand, the
anti-epilectics are much easier for the novice psychiatrists to begin using
without needing a lot of experience, since you cannot easily harm a patient
with the antiepilectics if you don't know what you are doing, but you can harm
a patient if you don't know what you are doing with Lithium.
David: You've discussed medications
somewhat. I'm wondering how important is psychotherapy in the treatment
of bipolar and what role does it play?
Dr. Fieve: Therapy as an adjunct to
medication is important in 30-40% of bipolar patients at least, and perhaps
even more so for families of bipolar patients. Many classical bipolar
patients do not want to have therapy and many do not need it.
David: By the way, if you haven't signed
up for our
Bipolar Community list, I encourage you to do so now.
We'll be doing a lot of interesting things and we use the list to notify you of
any events or new things going on in the community.
As you can imagine, we have a lot of audience questions to get to, Dr.
Fieve. Here we go:
Riki: I have been on Depakote and it
made me extremely aggressive? Can you explain why this medication had
this effect, and is that a normal side-effect?
Dr. Fieve: First of all, I would like to
know if you reached a therapeutic level in your blood (50 -100); if you
had the proper liver and CBC tests that you needed before you took the
medication; and if you had blood tests every two weeks the first 4-6
weeks. Secondly, I have never heard of Depakote causing aggressive
behavior, but if the dosage is too low, or if the dosage is correct and the
drug is not adequately treating the angry, irritable manic phase, then the
aggression will increase for those very reasons. In other words, it is
the inadequately treated manic depression that is giving rise to the
aggression. I would have to know more about you if this answer does not
satisfy you or ring true to you.
David: For the audience, I'd be
interested in knowing, if you have Bipolar, what has been the most effective
treatment for you? Here's another audience question:
kdcapecod: DO you feel therapy works
with children, or is it more effective as an adult. This is for a 12 year
old child that is bipolar and ultra rapid cycler? How do you suggest
managing this?
Dr. Fieve: Therapy and medication are of
equal importance, and neither can be really successful without the other.
Voodoo: I would like to hear your
thoughts concerning the use of Topiramate (Topamax) in the treatment of Bipolar
Disorder.
Dr. Fieve: Studies are, to date, very
few, but promising. This is another antiepilectic drug that we hope will
be effective in both phases of bipolar illness and it is rumoured that the
weight problem that comes with other drugs maybe less so with Topomax. I
am treating a number of patients with it at this point and it looks good, but
way off in the distance before trials are completed across the US. Trials
are beginning by top investigators throughout the country to fully evaluate the
preliminary positive findings in smaller numbers of bipolar patients.
David: Here are some audience responses
on the best treatment for bipolar disorder:
valasing: Most effective treatment:
Effexor, Depakote, and Wellbutrin.
cassjames4: My parents are both
Bipolars. Depakote has done VERY well for my mother, she just started on it
last year. Lithium didn't seem to work for her. They are 67 and
have been diagnosed for a long time. I am 31years old.
michelle1: Nothing yet.
CLIFF: LITHIUM ! LITHIUM ! AND IN THAT
ORDER.!! CHEAP, AND DOESN'T CHANGE TOLERANCE!
carol321: Depakote gave me aggressive
behavior and I've heard others complain of the same. The PDR lists
hostility as a possible side-effect.
Karen2: Lithium & Celexa & fish
oil.
liandrq: Yes, I have bipolar and nothing
seems to work.
WildZoe: A mix, Lithobid 900 mg a day,
Wellbutrin SR 2 a day, Topomax 1 a day (25 mg since I just began).
vernvier1: I'm bipolar and for the last
five years Lithium, Wellbutrin, and Depakote have worked pretty fair.
momof3: Have you noticed particular mood
swings with seasonal changes in children. I know that doctors see them in
adult bipolar patients. Lots of parents of bipolar kids are saying that
their kids seem either manic or depressed right now.
Dr. Fieve: In the literature, mood
changes of depression, or breakdowns of depression, or mania, tend to be more
frequent in the fall and the spring. Although many people will have
swings any time of the year.
Conway: Can you address rages and
promiscuity as symptoms.
Dr. Fieve: YES! Both are usually
seen in mania, but I refer to manic patients as either happy manics or angry
manics. In both cases, medication works but, I still feel Lithium is the
first choice in both, the happy and angry manic states ONLY if the doctor knows
what he is doing. If the doctor is young or inexperienced, give Depakote
or another medication instead.
cassjames4: Both my parents are
Bipolar. My mother is finally on medications and in treatment and doing
ok, but my father is getting progressively worse and dying from cancer as
well. He has even burned down our family house as a result of this mania
that he's been in for about 8 years now. He thinks life has never been
better. He won't accept help. Is there anything I can do?
Dr. Fieve: Your father has to agree to
an evaluation and some treatment since it is more important that he does not
burn down another house and harm himself or his family, rather than remain in a
happy manic state in his unfortunate terminal illness. If he refuses
treatment, you should consider hospitalization, since the next act of violence
might be fatal. Was the burning of the house a suicide attempt?
This can occur in states of mixed mania as well as depression
liandrq: Thank you, Dr. Fieve. I'm
attempting to cure myself. Is there a way to control manic
depression? Also, I have a hard time believing that what is happening to
me is real. I feel I am just a bad person. What can I do on my own
to change this.
Dr. Fieve: Unless you are a very mild
case of mood swings, which do not lead to risk-taking, or self-destructive, or
angry behaviour to others, you cannot sit out these recurrent mood
swings. I would go for an evaluation, and get direction of whether
treatment is needed or not. At the end of infrequent consultations, two or
three a year, I might say to a patient with very mild moodswings which do not
lead to negative consequences in the person and or the family's life, that it
is your choice: do you want to ride these out or do you want me to give you a
short-term - two to three month trial - of Lithium or alternatives to see which
you and your family prefer. Vitamins do not help, and feeling you are a
bad person is either a part of your depression, and/or negative self-image,
which might be corrected with medication and or lithium, and/or just plain
therapy.
David: Dr. Fieve, for those in the
audience who are the significant others of Bipolar sufferers, the parents, the
spouses, the close friends, how do you survive the unpredictability and mood
swings of the person with bipolar over an extended period of time? From
comments I am receiving, it has to be very trying and exhausting?
Dr. Fieve: I would like to suggest to
the family members to, first have a meeting with the patient and his/her doctor
and try to get it all out in the open with respect to your frustrations living
with the patient. And ask the doctor treating your relative what to
do. Secondly, there are books on the bookstand, that explain the illness,
including my own book
Moodswing, and there is considerable educational
information on the web, community lectures, and manic depressive support groups
throughout the country. Finally, if none of these suggestions are
helping, assuming the patient is in treatment, I would suggest a second opinion
by a psychopharmacologist who has a track record for seeing a large number of
bipolar patients and treating them over a long period of time.
David: Here are some more audience
comments on what treatment worked best for them:
Farfour: Nothing yet.
thelma: Shock treatment, Lithium (it was
toxic), Prozac, Zoloft.
shineNme: Depakote, Eskalith and
Vivactil have helped, but not totally eliminated the depression.
bernadette: Lithobid 1200 mg daily.
jeckylhyde: Depakote. My manics have
been kept in check, but I can't find relief from the depression.
shineNme: Before I was treated I was
very promiscuous, I was a overly happy manic then.
Mongan: Depakote worked, but had to keep
upping it. Lithium works OK, but nausea persists.
Karen2: How many years must Lithium be
taken for Bipolar?
Dr. Fieve: Karen, for active manic
patients, generally in the patients I have treated the correct dosage of
Lithium brings them down to normal within ten to fifteen days. If
depressive swings follow and the Lithium level is sufficiently therapeutic, .7
to 1.2, then an antidepressant has to be added. This is basically the art
of treatment of the individual of the psychopharmacologist who has seen many
patients; often atypical and often with complications over time.
David: By the way, I recognize some of
the people in the audience as
journalers on our site. If you haven't been to the
journaler section of the bipolar community, I want to
encourage you do so. It's one of the most popular areas of
HealthyPlace.com.
Click here to read our journalers in the
Bipolar Community who keep online diaries of their
experiences. You can read them and post your comments on their bulletin
boards.
JAMBER: How do you know if your child
has ADHD (Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder) or Bipolar?
Dr. Fieve: Jamber, often you do not
know, and only the factor of time will reveal which of these two diagnoses is
the correct one. Do not put labels on these young children too early
since many emotional problems, personality disorders, etc., disappear as
children get older, and often it is the parents' anxiety that must be
addressed. However, children with serious problems must be evaluated and
followed by experts, but diagnostic labels should be avoided if possible.
Trials, which are exploratory, and time-limited medications can be undertaken
with disturbed children. But unless the patient improves, these
medications should be indefinitely given. A very understanding therapist
is critical for these young people, who are undergoing constant physical,
emotional, and environmental changes.
eirrac: Do children, who will eventually
develop bipolar in later years, exhibit any behaviors early on that might
predict the illness?
Dr. Fieve: They may exhibit
hyperactivity, high energy, distractibility, charm and accomplishment. Or
they may experience nothing that you can detect. They also may experience
sadness, withdrawn behavior and poor socialization.
Jocasta: I was quite taken with your
book "Moodswing". I am interested on your current opinions of
alcohol use and the combination with antidepressants and Lithium and
benzodiazapines. I read your book in 86'. What are the effects on
moderate OR binge drinking NOW in 2000, with concurrent use of alcohol or
SSRI's and lithium? What is also the preferred SSRI of choice with the
least sexual side-effects? Serazone? Zoloft is great but, seems to
strike out at high levels. Paxal? Help please, Sir.
Dr. Fieve: Jocasta, there are three or
four questions to answer.
David: Why don't you address the alcohol
use since I've received several questions about that.
Dr. Fieve: There are no studies that
Lithium and/or antidepressants make a difference in moderate to severe
alcoholism or binge drinking, even though one study 22 years ago suggested
Lithium helped in binge drinking, but this was refuted by another study
later. The alcohol itself must be treated as an illness with abstinence
and preferably AA (Alcoholics Anonymous), and thereafter, if manic depression
is an accompanying co-morbid illness, it can be treated with an antibipolar
drug and therapy. If you have no alcoholism in your past history or
family history, I prescribe a very modest amount of alcohol, like a glass of
wine at dinner, if the bipolar illness is stable. Other doctors might
object to this since alcohol and bipolar are genetically related and they fear
any alcohol becomes a deterrent in treating bipolar illness. I don't,
since the patient's overall quality of life must be maintained if at all
possible with a minimal risk. The drugs with the fewest sexual-side
effects (antidepressant) include Serzone, Wellbutrin, and possibly Remeron and
maybe Celexa.
Nancy Smith: Is the diagnosis of bipolar
often used when a teenager is really just antisocial or delinquent? (Not
that antisocial behavior isn't a serious problem!)
Dr. Fieve: Nancy: It is possible, if you
are going to an inexperienced doctor/psychiatrist/teacher who has read a lot
about bipolar in the newspapers or magazines that are current, that this could
occur as a simple label to explain this behaviour.
David: Well, it is getting very
late. Dr. Fieve, thank you for being here tonight. You were a
wonderful guest and we appreciate you sharing your knowledge and insights with
us. I also want to thank everyone in the audience for coming and
participating. I hope you found the conference helpful.
Dr. Fieve: It was a pleasure to
participate in this stimulating discussion with your audience, and
congratulations on developing and moderating such an educational force in the
community.
David: Thank you doctor, and we hope
you'll come back again in the not too distant future. Here are the links
to Dr. Fieve's books: "Moodswing", and "Prozac". And here's Dr. Fieve's website:
www.fieve.com.
Dr. Fieve: Thank you, and I would be
very pleased to return - GOODNIGHT.
David: Here's the link to our
journalers in the Bipolar Community who keep online diaries
of their experiences. You can read them and post your comments on their
bulletin boards. We have an extensive
bipolar bulletin boards,
bipolar forums section on the site, as well as
bipolar chatrooms. Good night
everyone and thank you again for coming.
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