Pharmacopsychiatry 2000; 33(2): 75-77
DOI: 10.1055/s-2000-7973
Short Communication
Georg Thieme Verlag Stuttgart ·New York

Are Low Basal Serum Levels of the Thyroid Stimulating Hormone (b-TSH) a Risk Factor for Switches into States of Expansive Syndromes (Known in Germany as „Maniform Syndromes” in Bipolar I Depression?

R. Bottlender, D. Rudolf, A. Strauß, H.-J. Möller
  • Department of Psychiatry, Ludwig Maximilians University, Munich, Germany
Weitere Informationen

Publikationsverlauf

Publikationsdatum:
31. Dezember 2000 (online)

Switching over from depression into states known an „maniform” in Germany („expansive syndromes”) been frequently, observed and appears to be partially related to the type of antidepressive medication. Apart from the medication, some evidence suggests that additional factors such as thyroid function may be relevant for the switchover. With this background, the aim of the present study was to evaluate the hypothesis that depressed bipolar patients with lower basal TSH serum levels (b-TSH) on admission at the hospital as inpatients are at a higher risk of switching from depression into „maniform” states than depressed bipolar patients with higher b-TSH. From a total of 158 bipolar depressed patients, 16 patients developed mania during their hospital stay. After dividing the sample of patients at the median b-TSH into one group with lower b-TSH (N = 78) and another group with higher b-TSH (N = 79), we found that the switchover rate to mania was significantly higher in the group of patients with lower b-TSH (15.4 %) than in the group of patients with higher b-TSH (5.1 %). These findings suggest that lower b-TSH may be a risk factor for switching over from depression into „maniform” states in bipolar depressed patients.

References

  • 1 Baumgartner A, Campos-Barros A, Stula M, Meinhold H. Thyroid hormones and depressive illness - results from clinical and basic studies.  Pharmacopsychiatry. 1989;  22/5 192-193
  • 2 Bauer M S, Whybrow P C, Winokur A. Rapid cycling bipolar affective disorder. I. Association with grade I hypothyroidism.  Arch. Gen. Psychiatry.. 1990;  47/5 427-432
  • 3 Bobon D. Foreign adaptations of the AMDP-System. In D. Bobon, U Baumann, J Angst, H Helmchen & H Hippius eds., AMDP-System in Pharamcopsychiatry. Basel: Karger 1983: 19-34
  • 4 Bottlender R, Rudolf D, Strauß A, Möller H J. Antidepressant-associated Maniform States in acute Treatment of Patients with Bipolar I Depression.  Eur. Arch. Psychiatry Clin. Neurosci.. 1998;  248 296-300
  • 5 Corn T H, Checkley S A. A case of recurrent mania with recurrent hyperthyroidism.  Br. J. Psychiatry.. 1983;  143 74-76
  • 6 Evans D L, Strawn S K, Haggerty J J, Garbutt J C, Burnett G B, Pedersen C A. Appearance of mania in drug-resistant bipolar depressed patients after treatment with L-triiodothyronine.  J. Clin. Psychiatry.. 1986;  47/10 521-522
  • 7 Howland R R. Thyroid dysfunction in refractory depression: implications for pathophysiology and treatment.  J. Clin. Psychiatry.. 1993;  54/2 47
  • 8 Howland R H. Thyroid function in mood disorders.  Biol. Psychiatry.. 1995;  37/1 63-64
  • 9 Joyce P R. The prognostic significance of thyroid function in mania.  J. Psychiatr. Res.. 1991;  25/1-2 1-6
  • 10 Joffe R T, Levitt A J. Major depression and subclinical (grade 2) hypothyroidism.  Psychoneuroendocrinology.. 1992;  17/2-3 215-221
  • 11 Lee S, Chow C C, Wing Y K, Leung C M, Chiu H, Chen C N. Mania secondary to thyrotoxicosis.  Br. J. Psychiatry.. 1991;  159 712-713
  • 12 Loosen P T. Hormones of the hypothalamic-pituitary-thyroid axis: a psychoneuroendocrine perspective.  Pharmacopsychiatry.. 1986;  19(6) 401-415
  • 13 Oomen H A, Schipperijn A J, Drexhage H A. The prevalence of affective disorder and in particular of a rapid cycling of bipolar disorder in patients with abnormal thyroid function tests.  Clin. Endocrinol. Oxf.. 1996;  45/2 215-223
  • 14 Pietzcker A, Gebhardt R, Strauß A, Stockel M, Langer C, Freudenthal K. The syndrome scales in the AMDP-system.  Mod. Probl. Pharmacopsychiatry.. 1983;  20 88-99
  • 15 Walter-Ryan W G, Fahs J J. The problem with parsimony: mania and hyperthyroidism.  J. Clin. Psychiatry.. 1987;  48/7 289-290

M.D. Ronald Bottlender,

Psychiatrische Klinik der Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität

Nussbaumstraße 7

D-80336 München

Germany

eMail: bottlend@psy.med.uni-muenchen.de