Abstract

BackgroundThe aim was to investigate the personality profile of bipolar disorder I and II, and healthy controls, and to study whether personality influences the course of bipolar disorder.MethodsOne hundred ten patients with bipolar disorder I, 85 patients with bipolar disorder II, and 86 healthy individuals had their personality profile assessed using the Swedish universities Scales of Personality (SSP), an instrument developed to explore personality-related vulnerabilities and correlates of psychiatric disorders. Patients were followed prospectively for 2 years. To assess the impact of Neuroticism, Aggressiveness, and Disinhibition on illness course, we performed logistic regressions with the outcome variables mood episodes (depressive, hypo/manic, mixed), suicide attempts, violence, and the number of sick leave days.ResultsBipolar disorder I and II demonstrated higher global measures of Neuroticism, Aggressiveness, and Disinhibition as compared with healthy controls. A third of the patients scored ≥1 SD above the population-based normative mean on the global neuroticism measure. The two subtypes of bipolar disorder were, however, undistinguishable on all of the personality traits. In the unadjusted model, higher neuroticism at baseline predicted future depressive episodes and suicide attempts/violent behavior, but this association disappeared when adjusting for baseline depressive symptoms as assessed with MADRS.ConclusionsA significant minority of the patients scored ≥1 SD above the population mean on the global measures of Neuroticism, Aggressiveness and Disinhibition; scores this high are usually evident clinically. Yet, the personality profile does not seem to have prognostic value over a 2-year period.

Highlights

  • The aim was to investigate the personality profile of bipolar disorder I and Bipolar II disorder (II), and healthy controls, and to study whether personality influences the course of bipolar disorder

  • This paralleled a study by Muthadie et al, which found that patients with bipolar disorder type I scored substantially higher than controls on more specific measures of impulsivity

  • The patient groups differed from healthy controls with regard to Montgomery Åsberg Depression Rating Scale (MADRS) scores at baseline

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Summary

Introduction

The aim was to investigate the personality profile of bipolar disorder I and II, and healthy controls, and to study whether personality influences the course of bipolar disorder. The most common temperaments in manic-depressive illness were according to Kraepelin the moody ‘depressive’ temperament, the impulsive ‘manic’ temperament, and the hot-tempered ‘irritable’. Results showed that the average bipolar disorder patient scored about one standard deviation above the adult US population mean (norm data) on Neuroticism, replicating some of the results from two smaller studies [6, 8]. Bipolar disorder patients scored close to one standard deviation below the population mean on the Conscientiousness scale, which is indicative of increased impulsiveness. This paralleled a study by Muthadie et al, which found that patients with bipolar disorder type I scored substantially higher than controls on more specific measures of impulsivity

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