Bipolar Depression vs. Major Depression (Unipolar Depression)

East-Cobb-Psychiatry

Bipolar Depression vs. Major Depression (Unipolar Depression)

Bipolar Depression vs. Major Depression (Unipolar Depression)

Similarities

  • Both present with depressive episodes: low mood, loss of interest, fatigue, sleep/appetite changes, guilt, poor concentration, suicidal thoughts.
  • At first glance, the depressive phase of bipolar disorder looks almost identical to MDD.

Key Differences

FeatureMajor Depressive Disorder (MDD)Bipolar Depression
History of Mania/HypomaniaAbsentPresent (past or future)
OnsetLater, often after 25Earlier, often in teens/early 20s
Episode CourseMore persistent, fewer episodesMore recurrent, shorter episodes, higher relapse risk
Symptoms During DepressionTypical depressive signsMore atypical features (hypersomnia, hyperphagia, psychomotor retardation, mood lability)
Family HistoryMore unipolar depressionMore bipolar disorder or mood instability in family

 Why the Distinction Is Important

  • Misdiagnosis is common: Up to 40–60% of bipolar patients are initially misdiagnosed with MDD.
  • Treatment implications:
    • Giving antidepressants alone to someone with bipolar depression can:
      • Trigger mania or hypomania, suicidal thoughts
      • Induce rapid cycling (frequent mood episodes)
  • Worsen overall course of illness
  • Bipolar depression typically requires mood stabilizers (e.g., lithium, lamotrigine) or certain atypical antipsychotics (e.g., quetiapine, lurasidone), sometimes with cautious adjunct antidepressant use.
  • MDD, on the other hand, is usually treated first-line with antidepressants (SSRIs, SNRIs, etc.) ± psychotherapy.

Clinical Implications When Choosing Medications

  • Always rule out bipolar disorder before prescribing antidepressants.
  • Ask carefully about past manic/hypomanic episodes (reduced need for sleep, increased energy, pressured speech, risky behavior, inflated self-esteem).
  • If bipolar suspected:
    • Start with a mood stabilizer or antipsychotic.
    • Avoid antidepressant monotherapy.
  • If MDD confirmed:
    • Antidepressants (SSRIs, SNRIs, etc.) are safe first-line.

In short:
The depressive phases look similar, but history of mania/hypomania is the dividing line. It’s critical because wrong meds can destabilize bipolar disorder, while with MDD, antidepressants are standard care.