A blemish on bipolar disorder: aggressive behaviour

Introduction Many studies have searched for an association between violence and psychiatric diagnoses, without providing a confirmative result. Objectives We have sought to deepen this topic, analysing different aspects of aggressivity, focusing on a specific diagnosis and its particular phases of...

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Main Authors: R. Zanardi, E. Manfredi, F. Attanasio, M. Carminati, C. Colombo
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Cambridge University Press 2022-06-01
Series:European Psychiatry
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.cambridge.org/core/product/identifier/S0924933822010434/type/journal_article
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author R. Zanardi
E. Manfredi
F. Attanasio
M. Carminati
C. Colombo
author_facet R. Zanardi
E. Manfredi
F. Attanasio
M. Carminati
C. Colombo
author_sort R. Zanardi
collection DOAJ
description Introduction Many studies have searched for an association between violence and psychiatric diagnoses, without providing a confirmative result. Objectives We have sought to deepen this topic, analysing different aspects of aggressivity, focusing on a specific diagnosis and its particular phases of illness, and looking for a correlation between psychiatric co-diagnoses and outpatients’ visits adherence. Methods We studied 151 bipolar type I inpatients presenting complaint, past medical and family history; we collected information about lifetime hetero/self-aggressive behaviours, irritability, agitation, suicide attempts, alcohol, or substance abuse. Results The overall aggressivity in our sample resulted in 11.92% of cases, while the number of aggressive episodes during euthymia decreased to 2.64%, close to the population without psychiatric disorders. Personality disorders and alcohol abuse appeared to be the main risk factors for irritability [Fig. 1]; substance abuse for both irritability and hetero-aggressive behaviour [Fig. 2]. We observed that subjects who displayed better compliance to follow-up visits exhibited a significant lower aggressive behaviour than less adherent subjects. Moreover, our data disconfirm the common conception that correlates the presence of psychotic features to violence. Conclusions Studying aggressive in a bipolar population, we observed that the rare episodes of aggressiveness were condensed in active phases of illness and mainly related to alcohol or substance abuse, while violent acts during long periods of wellbeing appear in line with those of the general population. We are confident our data might be helpful in deconstructing the stigma that a psychiatric diagnosis equals to violent behaviour. Disclosure No significant relationships.
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spelling doaj.art-b4b7440ace8a41c2ba0d62c842eb9a572023-11-17T05:08:02ZengCambridge University PressEuropean Psychiatry0924-93381778-35852022-06-0165S411S41110.1192/j.eurpsy.2022.1043A blemish on bipolar disorder: aggressive behaviourR. Zanardi0E. Manfredi1F. Attanasio2M. Carminati3C. Colombo4IRCCS San Raffaele Scientific Institute, Psychiatry - Mood Disorders, Milano, ItalyUniversità Vita-Salute San Raffaele, Psychiatry, Milano, ItalyUniversità Vita-Salute San Raffaele, Psychiatry, Milano, ItalyUniversità Vita-Salute San Raffaele, Psychiatry, Milano, ItalyIRCCS San Raffaele Scientific Institute, Psychiatry - Mood Disorders, Milano, Italy Università Vita-Salute San Raffaele, Psychiatry, Milano, Italy Introduction Many studies have searched for an association between violence and psychiatric diagnoses, without providing a confirmative result. Objectives We have sought to deepen this topic, analysing different aspects of aggressivity, focusing on a specific diagnosis and its particular phases of illness, and looking for a correlation between psychiatric co-diagnoses and outpatients’ visits adherence. Methods We studied 151 bipolar type I inpatients presenting complaint, past medical and family history; we collected information about lifetime hetero/self-aggressive behaviours, irritability, agitation, suicide attempts, alcohol, or substance abuse. Results The overall aggressivity in our sample resulted in 11.92% of cases, while the number of aggressive episodes during euthymia decreased to 2.64%, close to the population without psychiatric disorders. Personality disorders and alcohol abuse appeared to be the main risk factors for irritability [Fig. 1]; substance abuse for both irritability and hetero-aggressive behaviour [Fig. 2]. We observed that subjects who displayed better compliance to follow-up visits exhibited a significant lower aggressive behaviour than less adherent subjects. Moreover, our data disconfirm the common conception that correlates the presence of psychotic features to violence. Conclusions Studying aggressive in a bipolar population, we observed that the rare episodes of aggressiveness were condensed in active phases of illness and mainly related to alcohol or substance abuse, while violent acts during long periods of wellbeing appear in line with those of the general population. We are confident our data might be helpful in deconstructing the stigma that a psychiatric diagnosis equals to violent behaviour. Disclosure No significant relationships. https://www.cambridge.org/core/product/identifier/S0924933822010434/type/journal_articleaggressivenessstigmaviolencebipolar disorder
spellingShingle R. Zanardi
E. Manfredi
F. Attanasio
M. Carminati
C. Colombo
A blemish on bipolar disorder: aggressive behaviour
European Psychiatry
aggressiveness
stigma
violence
bipolar disorder
title A blemish on bipolar disorder: aggressive behaviour
title_full A blemish on bipolar disorder: aggressive behaviour
title_fullStr A blemish on bipolar disorder: aggressive behaviour
title_full_unstemmed A blemish on bipolar disorder: aggressive behaviour
title_short A blemish on bipolar disorder: aggressive behaviour
title_sort blemish on bipolar disorder aggressive behaviour
topic aggressiveness
stigma
violence
bipolar disorder
url https://www.cambridge.org/core/product/identifier/S0924933822010434/type/journal_article
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