Your Patient Is Depressed: Could It Be Bipolar Disorder?

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Clinician's Roundtable

Science


Host: Jennifer Caudle, DO Guest: Roger S. McIntyre, MD, FRCPC Nationally, approximately 43% of family physicians are providing mental health care, and approximately 25% of patients with depression in a primary care setting may actually have bipolar disorder.1,2 A possible cause of misdiagnosis is that depressive episodes are commonly the initial presentation of the disease.3 Faster recognition and more accurate management of patients with bipolar depression is absolutely critical, explains Dr. Roger McIntyre, Professor of Psychiatry and Pharmacology at the University of Toronto, in an article entitled, Bipolar Depression: The Clinical Characteristics and Unmet Needs of a Complex Disorder. The open access article is available online at the journal’s website: Roger S. McIntyre & Joseph R. Calabrese (2019) Bipolar depression: the clinical characteristics and unmet needs of a complex disorder, Current Medical Research and Opinion, 35:11, 1993-2005, DOI: 10.1080/03007995.2019.1636017 References 1. Hirschfeld RMA, Cass AR, Holt DCL, et al. J Am Board Fam Pract. 2005;18(4):233-239. 2. Xierali IM, Tong ST, Petterson SM, et al. J Am Board Fam Pract. 2013;26(2):114-115. 3. Mitchell PB, Goodwin GM, Johnson GF, et al. Bipolar Disord. 2008;10:144–152.