Interpersonal and social rhythm therapy: managing the chaos of bipolar disorder

Interpersonal and social rhythm therapy is an individual psychotherapy designed specifically for the treatment for bipolar disorder. Interpersonal and social rhythm therapy grew from a chronobiological model of bipolar disorder postulating that individuals with bipolar disorder have a genetic predisposition to circadian rhythm and sleep-wake cycle abnormalities that may be responsible, in part, for the symptomatic manifestations of the illness. In our model, life events (both negative and positive) may cause disruptions in patients' social rhythms that, in turn, perturb circadian rhythms and sleep-wake cycles and lead to the development of bipolar symptoms. Administered in concert with medications, interpersonal and social rhythm therapy combines the basic principles of interpersonal psychotherapy with behavioral techniques to help patients regularize their daily routines, diminish interpersonal problems, and adhere to medication regimens. It modulates both biological and psychosocial factors to mitigate patients' circadian and sleep-wake cycle vulnerabilities, improve overall functioning, and better manage the potential chaos of bipolar disorder symptomatology.

[1]  D J Kupfer,et al.  Drug therapy in the prevention of recurrences in unipolar and bipolar affective disorders. Report of the NIMH Collaborative Study Group comparing lithium carbonate, imipramine, and a lithium carbonate-imipramine combination. , 1984, Archives of general psychiatry.

[2]  J. D. Frank Eleventh Emil A. Gutheil memorial conference. Therapeutic factors in psychotherapy. , 1971, American journal of psychotherapy.

[3]  D. Kupfer,et al.  EEG sleep profiles and recurrent depression , 1991, Biological Psychiatry.

[4]  G. Sachs,et al.  The Expert Consensus Guideline Series: Medication Treatment of Bipolar Disorder 2000. , 2000, Postgraduate medicine.

[5]  L. Grossman,et al.  Course and outcome in bipolar affective disorder: a longitudinal follow-up study. , 1995, The American journal of psychiatry.

[6]  D. Kupfer,et al.  Bipolar depression: An underestimated treatment challenge , 1997, Depression and anxiety.

[7]  G. Klerman,et al.  The enduring psychosocial consequences of mania and depression. , 1993, The American journal of psychiatry.

[8]  D J Kupfer,et al.  Nortriptyline and interpersonal psychotherapy as maintenance therapies for recurrent major depression: a randomized controlled trial in patients older than 59 years. , 1999, JAMA.

[9]  E. Leibenluft,et al.  A clinical trial of sleep deprivation in combination with antidepressant medication , 1993, Psychiatry Research.

[10]  M S Buchsbaum,et al.  Prediction of antidepressant effects of sleep deprivation by metabolic rates in the ventral anterior cingulate and medial prefrontal cortex. , 1999, The American journal of psychiatry.

[11]  [Biological rhythms and depression]. , 1986, Schweizer Archiv fur Neurologie und Psychiatrie.

[12]  E. Frank,et al.  Psychosocial treatments for bipolar disorder. , 2002 .

[13]  D. Kupfer,et al.  Social rhythm disruption and stressful life events in the onset of bipolar and unipolar episodes , 2000, Psychological Medicine.

[14]  T. Wehr,et al.  Sleep reduction as a final common pathway in the genesis of mania. , 1987, The American journal of psychiatry.

[15]  Ellen Leibenluft,et al.  Relationship between sleep and mood in patients with rapid-cycling bipolar disorder , 1996, Psychiatry Research.

[16]  G. Johnson " Perspecives on lithium treatment of bipolar disorder" - by Mogens Schou: a commentary. , 1999, Bipolar Disorders.

[17]  D. Kupfer,et al.  Biological rhythms and depression: The role of zeitgebers and zeitstorers , 1993 .

[18]  R. Benson The forgotten treatment modality in bipolar illness: psychotherapy. , 1975, Diseases of the nervous system.

[19]  E. Vieta,et al.  What Is the Role of Psychotherapy in the Treatment of Bipolar Disorder? , 1998, Psychotherapy and Psychosomatics.

[20]  F. Goodwin Manic-Depressive Illness , 1990 .

[21]  A. Mander,et al.  Efficacy of Lithium Prophylaxis in Clinical Practice , 1989, British Journal of Psychiatry.

[22]  D. Kupfer,et al.  Inducing lifestyle regularity in recovering bipolar disorder patients: Results from the maintenance therapies in bipolar disorder protocol , 1997, Biological Psychiatry.

[23]  D. Kupfer,et al.  Social zeitgebers and biological rhythms. A unified approach to understanding the etiology of depression. , 1988, Archives of general psychiatry.

[24]  Timothy A Kelly,et al.  A Guide to Treatments That Work. , 2000 .

[25]  F. Fromm-Reichmann Intensive psychotherapy of manic-depressives. , 1948, Confinia neurologica.

[26]  Timothy H. Monk,et al.  The social rhythm metric (SRM): Measuring daily social rhythms over 12 weeks , 1991, Psychiatry Research.

[27]  E. Smeraldi,et al.  The unipolar–bipolar dichotomy and the response to sleep deprivation , 1998, Psychiatry Research.

[28]  Lithium salts in the treatment of psychotic excitement. , 1949, The Medical journal of Australia.

[29]  G. Klerman,et al.  Treatment of depression by drugs and psychotherapy. , 1974, The American journal of psychiatry.

[30]  D. Kupfer,et al.  Adjunctive psychotherapy for bipolar disorder: effects of changing treatment modality. , 1999, Journal of abnormal psychology.

[31]  D J Kupfer,et al.  Three-year outcomes for maintenance therapies in recurrent depression. , 1990, Archives of general psychiatry.

[32]  E. Leibenluft,et al.  Is sleep deprivation useful in the treatment of depression? , 1992, The American journal of psychiatry.

[33]  J. Fine,et al.  DIGITALIS INTOXICATION IN ELDERLY PATIENTS. , 1965, Lancet.

[34]  G. Klerman,et al.  Interpersonal psychotherapy of depression , 1984 .

[35]  K. Jamison,et al.  Life events and the course of bipolar disorder. , 1990, The American journal of psychiatry.

[36]  D. Kupfer,et al.  Five-year outcome for maintenance therapies in recurrent depression. , 1990, Archives of general psychiatry.

[37]  D J Kupfer,et al.  Long-term treatment of depression. , 1991, The Journal of clinical psychiatry.

[38]  D. Kupfer,et al.  Stressful life events and social rhythm disruption in the onset of manic and depressive bipolar episodes: a preliminary investigation. , 1998, Archives of general psychiatry.

[39]  B. Carroll,et al.  NEUROENDOCRINE DISTURBANCES AND THE DIAGNOSIS AND ÆTIOLOGY OF ENDOGENOUS DEPRESSION , 1980, The Lancet.

[40]  T H Monk,et al.  The Social Rhythm Metric An Instrument to Quantify the Daily Rhythms of Life , 1990, The Journal of nervous and mental disease.