Copyright © 2005 Elsevier SAS All rights reserved.
Original article
Effective maintenance treatment—breaking the cycle of bipolar disorder
Available online 24 August 2005.
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Abstract
Clinical guidelines for treatment and research of bipolar disorder greatly benefit from the synthesis of data from individual studies. The British Association for Psychopharmacology bases its guidelines on evidence from opinions (level D) to systematic reviews of primary trial data (level A). The report details conclusions of its 1-day consensus meeting to develop guidelines covering diagnosis, clinical management, pharmacotherapy for acute episodes, relapse prevention and treatment discontinuation. Monotherapy for long-term management is preferred, having reduced side-effects and drug interactions and improved compliance. Combination therapy is often preferred for acute episodes, using antipsychotics for mania or antidepressants for depression. Increased efficacy may be attributed to multiple mechanisms of action and potentially lower doses. In clinical practice, maintenance monotherapy has limited success for chronic episodes and polypharmacy is frequently used, though the best combination remains unclear. A new collaborative approach based on simple clinical trials is required to change current medical practice.
Keywords: Bipolar disorder; Divalproate; Guidelines; Lithium; Maintenance therapy; Olanzapine
Article Outline
- 1. Introduction
- 2. Guidelines and clinical experience
- 3. Classic prophylaxis against bipolar disorder
- 4. Maintenance treatment
- 5. Monotherapy and combination therapy
- 6. Selecting an appropriate combination
- 7. Combination therapy in acute mania
- 8. Current and future studies
- 9. Syndromal versus functional recovery
- 10. Alternative maintenance therapies
- 11. Reasons for non-compliance
- 11.1. Illness denial
- 11.2. Psychological reasons
- 11.3. Psychiatrist's negative attitude
- 11.4. Short illness duration
- 11.5. Medication-related factors, including side-effects and their overestimation
- 11.6. Age
- 12. Enhanced care
- 13. Conclusions
- Acknowledgements
- References






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