Late Onset Bipolar Disorder (LOBD): a case report
M. Martín De Argila Lorente, B. Franco Lovaco, B. Rabinovici, C. Díaz Mayoral, G. E. Toapanta Yanza

TL;DR
This paper presents a case of a 76-year-old woman diagnosed with late-onset bipolar disorder and discusses the challenges of managing bipolar disorder in elderly patients.
Contribution
The paper contributes a detailed case report of LOBD and emphasizes the importance of differential diagnosis and careful medication management in elderly patients.
Findings
LOBD constitutes 5-10% of all bipolar disorder cases in those over 50 years old.
Elderly patients with bipolar disorder often have comorbidities and require careful psychotropic drug management.
The case highlights successful treatment adjustments leading to improved mood and functioning.
Abstract
Bipolar disorder (BD) in the elderly patient may present as the evolution of illness initiated earlier in life or as a new-onset entity. Therefore, two groups of patients are distinguished: “late onset” (LOBD) when the first mania occurs in old age and “early onset” in elderly patients with long-standing history. BD in elderly patients (≥60 years) constitutes 25% of all BD cases. Specific aspects of older age bipolar disorder (OABD) are somatic and psychiatric comorbidity, impaired cognition and age-related psychosocial functioning. The management of BD in the elderly is complex given the high sensitivity of these patients to pharmacological side effects, particularly of psychotropic drugs. The case of a patient with LOBD is presented, followed by a theoretical review of the subject. A case is presented with a bibliographic review. A 76-year-old woman who had no prior history of…
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Taxonomy
TopicsBipolar Disorder and Treatment
