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Temporal variations of depressive symptoms in patients with bipolar, borderline personality, and major depressive disorder: an ecological momentary assessment study

Martikkala, Annasofia; Baryshnikov, Ilya; Granroth-Wilding, Hanna; Heikkilä, Roope; Riihimäki, Kirsi; Saleva, Outi; Holmen, Joel; Darst, Richard; Rosenström, Tom; Aledavood, Talayeh; Isometsä, Erkki

Temporal variations of depressive symptoms in patients with bipolar, borderline personality, and major depressive disorder: an ecological momentary assessment study

Martikkala, Annasofia
Baryshnikov, Ilya
Granroth-Wilding, Hanna
Heikkilä, Roope
Riihimäki, Kirsi
Saleva, Outi
Holmen, Joel
Darst, Richard
Rosenström, Tom
Aledavood, Talayeh
Isometsä, Erkki
Katso/Avaa
1-s2.0-S0022395625005771-main.pdf (1.259Mb)
Lataukset: 

Elsevier
doi:10.1016/j.jpsychires.2025.09.054
URI
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jpsychires.2025.09.054
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Julkaisun pysyvä osoite on:
https://urn.fi/URN:NBN:fi-fe202601216091
Tiivistelmä

Background

Identifying the principal and comorbid diagnoses of a patient suffering from a major depressive episode (MDE) is crucial. Ecological momentary assessment (EMA) may help identify patterns of symptom fluctuations characteristic of a specific disorder and thus potentially improve the differential diagnostics.

Methods

This EMA study aimed to investigate the real-time group differences in temporal variations of depressive symptoms in patients with an ongoing MDE and a diagnosis of bipolar (BD; n = 17), borderline personality (BPD; n = 15), or major depressive disorder (MDD; n = 45) and healthy controls (HC; n = 23). Multilevel modeling analyses were performed to assess the mean level, inertia, and variability of five symptom dimensions, all ranging from positive to negative: mood, anger, anhedonia, energy, and hopelessness.

Results

All patient groups showed significantly different mean levels of all symptoms compared with HC as well as significantly greater inertia of anger and anhedonia. Furthermore, BPD patients exhibited significantly greater inertia of mood, anhedonia, and hopelessness than BD and MDD groups. By modeling different variance structures, variability of all five symptoms was found to be lowest among HC and highest among BD and/or BPD groups. Energy was the only symptom dimension where the difference in variability could also be found in the BD-BPD group comparison.

Limitations

While the overall number of participants included (n = 100) was moderate for an EMA study, numbers of patients in the BD and BPD subgroups were small.

Conclusions

These findings suggest partially different temporal variations of depressive symptoms among depressed patients with BD, BPD, or MDD and HC.

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