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Published Online: November 1941

ELECTROENCEPHALOGRAMS OF MANIC-DEPRESSIVE PATIENTS

Publication: American Journal of Psychiatry

Abstract

Thae EEGs of 81 manic-depressive patients of whom 52 were diagnosed as manic-depressive depressed (MDD), 22 as manic-depressive manic (MDM), and 7 as manic-depressive mixed (MD mixed) were recorded and analyzed. Findings reveal that there is very little change in the EEGs when patients diagnosed as MDD or MDM shift from one phase to another except when the level of consciousness is altered.
Those patients whose EEGs show erratic slow wave disturbances are those whose behavior is unpredictable, regardless of diagnosis.
The majority of the MDD group have A or MS patterns with alpha frequencies of 10 cycles or slower. The MDM majority of the MDM group have MF patterns with alpha frequencies 10 cycles or faster.
Previous studies show a correlation between passive, dependent types of individuals and A patterns, and between agressive, active, independent individuals and MF or B patterns.
It is the author's belief that if a person with an A pattern should develop MD psychosis he will be more apt to be diagnosed as MDD. If he has an MF or B pattern composed of fast frequencies he will be more apt to be diagnosed as MDM or as "agitated depression."
The EEGs have not yet yielded data concerning the factors responsible for the shifts in the manic-depressive phases when the level of consciousness is still unimpaired.

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Go to American Journal of Psychiatry
Go to American Journal of Psychiatry
American Journal of Psychiatry
Pages: 430 - 433

History

Published in print: November 1941
Published online: 1 April 2006

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PAULINE A. DAVIS
McLean Hospital, Waverley, Mass., and the department of physiology, Harvard Medical School, Boston, Mass.

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