The ICD-10 Classification of Mental and Behavioral Disorders
World Health Organization, Geneva, 1992
This disorder is characterized by repeated (i.e. at least two)
episodes in which the patient's mood and activity levels are
significantly disturbed, this disturbance consisting on some occasions
of an elevation of mood and increased energy and activity (mania or
hypomania), and on others of a lowering of mood and decreased energy and
activity (depression). Characteristically, recovery is usually complete
between episodes, and the incidence in the two sexes is more nearly
equal than in other mood disorders. As patients who suffer only from
repeated episodes of mania are comparatively rare, and resemble (in
their family history, premorbid personality, age of onset, and long-term
prognosis) those who also have at least occasional episodes of
depression, such patients are classified as bipolar.
Manic episodes usually begin abruptly and last for between 2 weeks
and 4-5 months (median duration about 4 months). Depressions tend to
last longer (median length about 6 months), though rarely for more than
a year, except in the elderly. Episodes of both kinds often follow
stressful life events or other mental trauma, but the presence of such
stress is not essential for the diagnosis. The first episode may occur
at any age from childhood to old age. The frequency of episodes and the
pattern of remissions and relapses are both very variable, though
remissions tend to get shorter as time goes on and depressions to become
commoner and longer lasting after middle age.
Although the original concept of "manic-depressive
psychosis" also included patients who suffered only from
depression, the term "manic-depressive disorder or psychosis"
is now used mainly as a synonym for bipolar disorder.
Includes:
- manic-depressive illness, psychosis or reaction
Excludes:
- bipolar disorder, single manic episode
- cyclothymia
The patient has had at least one manic, hypomanic, or mixed affective
episode in the past and currently exhibits either a mixture of a rapid
alternation of manic, hypomanic, and depressive symptoms.
Diagnostic Guidelines
Although the most typical form of bipolar disorder consists of
alternating manic and depressive episodes separated by periods of normal
mood, it is not uncommon for depressive mood to be accompanied for days
or weeks on end by overactivity and pressure of speech, or for a manic
mood and grandiosity to be accompanied by agitation and loss of energy
and libido. Depressive symptoms and symptoms of hypomania or mania may
also alternate rapidly, from day to day or even from hour to hour. A
diagnosis of mixed bipolar affective disorder should be made only if the
two sets of symptoms are both prominent for the greater part of the
current episode of illness, and if that episode has lasted for a least 2
weeks.
Excludes:
- single mixed affective episode
Three degrees of severity are specified here, sharing the common
underlying characteristics of elevated mood, and an increase in the
quantity and speed of physical and mental activity. All the subdivisions
of this category should be used only for a single manic episode. If
previous or subsequent affective episodes (depressive, manic, or
hypomanic), the disorder should be coded under bipolar affective
disorder.
Includes:
- bipolar disorder, single manic episode
Hypomania is a lesser degree of mania, in which abnormalities of mood
and behaviour are too persistent and marked to be included under
cyclothymia but are not accompanied by hallucinations or delusions.
There is a persistent mild elevation of mood (for at least several days
on end), increased energy and activity, and usually marked feelings of
well-being and both physical and mental efficiency. Increased
sociability, talkativeness, overfamiliarity, increased sexual energy,
and a decreased need for sleep are often present but not to the extent
that they lead to severe disruption of work or result in social
rejection. Irritability, conceit, and boorish behaviour may take the
place of the more usual euphoric sociability.
Concentration and attention may be impaired, thus diminishing the
ability to settle down to work or to relaxation and leisure, but this
may not prevent the appearance of interests in quite new ventures and
activities, or mild over-spending.
Diagnostic Guidelines
Several of the features mentioned above, consistent with elevated or
changed mood and increased activity, should be present for at least
several days on end, to a degree and with a persistence greater than
described for cyclothymia. Considerable interference with work or social
activity is consistent with a diagnosis of hypomania, but if disruption
of these is severe or complete, mania should be diagnosed.
Differential Diagnosis
Hypomania covers the range of disorders of mood and level of
activities between cyclothymia and mania. The increased activity and
restlessness (and often weight loss) must be distinguished from the same
symptoms occurring in hyperthyroidism and anorexia nervosa; early states
of "agitated depression", particularly in late middle-age, may
bear a superficial resemblance to hypomania of the irritable variety.
Patients with severe obsessional symptoms may be active part of the
night completing their domestic cleaning rituals, but their affect will
usually be the opposite of that described here.
When a short period of hypomania occurs as a prelude to or aftermath
of mania, it is usually not worth specifying the hypomania separately.
Mood is elevated out of keeping with the individual's circumstances
and may vary from carefree joviality to almost uncontrollable
excitement. Elation is accompanied by increased energy, resulting in
overactivity, pressure of speech, and a decreased need for sleep. Normal
social inhibitions are lost, attention cannot be sustained, and there is
often marked distractability. Self-esteem is inflated, and grandiose or
over-optimistic ideas are freely expressed.
Perceptual disorders may occur, such as the appreciation of colours
as especially vivid (and usually beautiful), a preoccupation with fine
details of surfaces or textures, and subjective hyperacusis. The
individual may embark on extravagant and impractical schemes, spend
money recklessly, or become aggressive, amorous, or facetious in
inappropriate circumstances. In some manic episodes the mood is
irritable and suspicious rather than elated. The first attack occurs
most commonly between the ages of 15 and 30 years, but may occur at any
age from late childhood to the seventh or eighth decade.
Diagnostic Guidelines
The episode should last for at least 1 week and should be severe
enough to disrupt ordinary work and social activities more or less
completely. The mood change should be accompanied by increased energy
and several of the symptoms referred to above (particularly pressure of
speech, decreased need for sleep, grandiosity, and excessive optimism).
F30.2 Mania With Psychotic Symptoms
The clinical picture is that of a more severe form of mania as
described above. Inflated self-esteem and grandiose ideas may develop
into delusions, and irritability and suspiciousness into delusions of
persecution. In severe cases, grandiose or religious delusions of
identity or role may be prominent, and flight of ideas and pressure of
speech may result in the individual becoming incomprehensible. Severe
and sustained physical activity and excitement may result in aggression
or violence, and neglect of eating, drinking, and personal hygiene may
result in dangerous states of dehydration and self-neglect. If required,
delusions or hallucinations can be specified as congruent or incongruent
with the mood. "Incongruent" should be taken as including
affectively neutral delusions and hallucinations; for example, delusions
of reference with no guilty or accusatory content, or voices speaking to
the individual about events that have no special emotional significance.
Differential Diagnosis
One of the commonest problems is differentiation of this disorder
from schizophrenia, particularly if the stages of development through
hypomania have been missed and the patient is seen only at the height of
the illness when widespread delusions, incomprehensible speech, and
violent excitement may obscure the basic disturbance of affect. Patients
with mania that is responding to neuroleptic medication may present a
similar diagnostic problem at the stage when they have returned to
normal levels of physical and mental activity but still have delusions
or hallucinations. Occasional hallucinations or delusions as specified
for schizophrenia may also be classed as mood-incongruent, but if these
symptoms are prominent and persistent, the diagnosis of schizoaffective
disorder is more likely to be appropriate.
Includes:
In typical depressive episodes of all three varieties described below
(mild, moderate, and severe), the individual usually suffers from
depressed mood, loss of interest and enjoyment, and reduced energy
leading to increased fatiguability and diminished activity. Marked
tiredness after only slight effort is common. Other common symptoms are:
- reduced concentration and attention;
- reduced self-esteem and self-confidence;
- ideas of guilt and unworthiness (even in a mild type of episode);
- bleak and pessimistic views of the future;
- ideas or acts of self-harm or suicide;
- disturbed sleep;
- diminished appetite.
The lowered mood varies little from day to day, and is often
unresponsive to circumstances, yet may show a characteristic diurnal
variation as the day goes on. As with manic episodes, the clinical
presentation shows marked individual variations, and atypical
presentations are particularly common in adolescence. In some cases,
anxiety, distress, and motor agitation may be more prominent at times
than the depression, and the mood change may also be masked by added
features such as irritability, excessive consumption of alcohol,
histrionic behaviour, and exacerbation of pre-existing phobic or
obsessional symptoms, or by hypochondriacal preoccupations. For
depressive episodes of all three grades of severity, a duration of at
least 2 weeks is usually required for diagnosis, but shorter periods may
be reasonable if symptoms are unusually severe and of rapid onset.
Some of the above symptoms may be marked and develop characteristic
features that are widely regarded as having special clinical
significance. The most typical examples of these "somatic"
symptoms are: loss of interest or pleasure in activities that are
normally enjoyable; lack of emotional reactivity to normally pleasurable
surroundings and events; waking in the morning 2 hours or more before
the usual time; depression worse in the morning; objective evidence of
definite psychomotor retardation or agitation (remarked on or reported
by other people); marked loss of appetite; weight loss (often defined as
5% or more of body weight in the past month); marked loss of libido.
Usually, this somatic syndrome is not regarded as present unless about
four of these symptoms are definitely present.
The categories of mild, moderate and severe depressive episodes
described in more detail below should be used only for a single (first)
depressive episode. Further depressive episodes should be classified
under one of the subdivisions of recurrent depressive disorder.
These grades of severity are specified to cover a wide range of
clinical states that are encountered in different types of psychiatric
practice. Individuals with mild depressive episodes are common in
primary care and general medical settings, whereas psychiatric inpatient
units deal largely with patients suffering from the severe grades.
Acts of self-harm associated with mood (affective) disorders, most
commonly self-poisoning by prescribed medication, should be recorded by
means of an additional code from Chapter XX of ICD-10 (X60-X84). These
codes do not involve differentiation between attempted suicide and
"parasuicide", since both are included in the general category
of self-harm.
Differentiation between mild, moderate, and severe depressive
episodes rests upon a complicated clinical judgement that involves the
number, type, and severity of symptoms present. The extent of ordinary
social and work activities is often a useful general guide to the likely
degree of severity of the episode, but individual, social, and cultural
influences that disrupt a smooth relationship between severity of
symptoms and social performance are sufficiently common and powerful to
make it unwise to include social performance amongst the essential
criteria of severity.
The presence of dementia or mental retardation does not rule out the
diagnosis of a treatable depressive episode, but communication
difficulties are likely to make it necessary to rely more than usual for
the diagnosis upon objectively observed somatic symptoms, such as
psychomotor retardation, loss of appetite and weight, and sleep
disturbance.
Includes:
- single episodes of depression (without psychotic symptoms),
psychogenic depression or reactive depression)
Diagnostic Guidelines
Depressed mood, loss of interest and enjoyment, and increased
fatiguability are usually regarded as the most typical symptoms of
depression, and at least two of these, plus at least two of the other
symptoms described above should usually be present for a definite
diagnosis. None of the symptoms should be present to an intense degree.
Minimum duration of the whole episode is about 2 weeks.
An individual with a mild depressive episode is usually distressed by
the symptoms and has some difficulty in continuing with ordinary work
and social activities, but will probably not cease to function
completely.
A fifth character may be used to specify the presence of the somatic
syndrome:
F32.00 Without somatic symptoms
The criteria for mild depressive episode are fulfilled, and there are
few or none of the somatic symptoms present.
F32.01 With somatic symptoms
The criteria for mild depressive episode are fulfilled, and four or
more of the somatic symptoms are also present. (If only two or three
somatic symptoms are present but they are unusually severe, use of this
category may be justified.)
Diagnostic Guidelines
At least two of the three most typical symptoms noted for mild
depressive episode should be present, plus at least three (and
preferably four) of the other symptoms. Several symptoms are likely to
be present to a marked degree, but this is not essential if a
particularly wide variety of symptoms is present overall. Minimum
duration of the whole episode is about 2 weeks.
An individual with a moderately severe depressive episode will
usually have considerable difficulty in continuing with social, work or
domestic activities.
A fifth character may be used to specify the occurrence of somatic
symptoms:
F32.10 Without somatic symptoms
The criteria for moderate depressive episode are fulfilled, and few
if any of the somatic symptoms are present.
F32.11 With somatic symptoms
The criteria for moderate depressive episode are fulfilled, and four
or more or the somatic symptoms are present. (If only two or three
somatic symptoms are present but they are unusually severe, use of this
category may be justified.)
F32.2 Severe Depressive Episode Without Psychotic Symptoms
In a severe depressive episode, the sufferer usually shows
considerable distress or agitation, unless retardation is a marked
feature. Loss of self-esteem or feelings of uselessness or guilt are
likely to be prominent, and suicide is a distinct danger in particularly
severe cases. It is presumed here that the somatic syndrome will almost
always be present in a severe depressive episode.
Diagnostic Guidelines
All three of the typical symptoms noted for mild and moderate
depressive episodes should be present, plus at least four other
symptoms, some of which should be of severe intensity. However, if
important symptoms such as agitation or retardation are marked, the
patient may be unwilling or unable to describe many symptoms in detail.
An overall grading of severe episode may still be justified in such
instances. The depressive episode should usually last at least 2 weeks,
but if the symptoms are particularly severe and of very rapid onset, it
may be justified to make this diagnosis after less than 2 weeks.
During a severe depressive episode it is very unlikely that the
sufferer will be able to continue with social, work, or domestic
activities, except to a very limited extent.
This category should be used only for single episodes of severe
depression without psychotic symptoms; for further episodes, a
subcategory of recurrent depressive disorder should be used.
Includes:
- single episodes of agitated depression
- melancholia or vital depression without psychotic symptoms
Diagnostic Guidelines
A severe depressive episode which meets the criteria given for severe
depressive episode without psychotic symptoms and in which delusions,
hallucinations, or depressive stupor are present. The delusions usually
involve ideas of sin, poverty, or imminent disasters, responsibility for
which may be assumed by the patient. Auditory or olfactory
hallucinations are usually of defamatory or accusatory voices or of
rotting filth or decomposing flesh. Severe psychomotor retardation may
progress to stupor. If required, delusions or hallucinations may be
specified as mood-congruent or mood-incongruent.
Differential Diagnosis
Depressive stupor must be differentiated from catatonic
schizophrenia, from dissociative stupor, and from organic forms of
stupor. This category should be used only for single episodes of severe
depression with psychotic symptoms; for further episodes a subcategory
of recurrent depressive disorder should be used.
Includes:
- single episodes of major depression with psychotic symptoms,
psychotic depression, psychogenic depressive psychosis, reactive
depressive psychosis