# Can adaptive hyperactivation result in a positive score on the Mood Disorder Questionnaire? Evidence from a case-control study over a community survey

**Authors:** Michela Atzeni, Michele Fornaro, Massimo Tusconi, Cesar Ivan Aviles Gonzalez, Elisa Cantone, Elisa Pintus, Serdar M. Dursun, Antonio E. Nardi, Federica Sancassiani, Mauro Giovanni Carta

PMC · DOI: 10.3389/fpsyt.2025.1626277 · Frontiers in Psychiatry · 2026-01-05

## TL;DR

The study finds that some people scoring positive on a mood disorder questionnaire may actually have healthy, adaptive patterns of hyperactivation rather than a mental illness.

## Contribution

The paper identifies a subgroup of MDQ-positive individuals with high quality of life and minimal psychiatric issues, suggesting adaptive hyperactivation.

## Key findings

- 33% of MDQ-positive individuals had high quality of life and fewer psychiatric diagnoses.
- High-QoL MDQ-positive individuals had similar psychiatric morbidity to MDQ-negative controls.
- Low-QoL MDQ-positive individuals showed higher rates of anxiety, OCD, and eating disorders.

## Abstract

Bipolar Disorder (BD) remains challenging to identify, and the Mood Disorder Questionnaire (MDQ) may capture heterogeneous forms of hyperactivation, including adaptive patterns unrelated to psychopathology.

To determine whether MDQ-positive individuals include a subgroup with adaptive hyperactivation—characterized by high quality of life (QoL) and minimal psychiatric morbidity—and to examine whether MDQ positivity also identifies diagnoses beyond BD.

Using data from a large Italian community survey with DSM-IV clinical interviews and MDQ screening, we conducted a case–control analysis. MDQ-positive individuals were stratified by SF-12 QoL scores (>40 vs. ≤40), and matched MDQ-negative controls were selected by age and sex. Psychiatric diagnoses were compared using ANOVA and chi-square tests.

Among 91 MDQ-positive participants, 33% showed high QoL and exhibited markedly fewer psychiatric diagnoses than those with low QoL (χ²=15.529, p<0.0001). High-QoL MDQ-positive individuals displayed psychiatric morbidity comparable to MDQ-negative controls, whereas low-QoL MDQ-positive individuals showed excess anxiety, obsessive–compulsive, and eating disorders.

MDQ positivity identifies a heterogeneous population, including individuals with adaptive hyperactivation and preserved functioning. These findings highlight the need for more refined instruments capable of distinguishing adaptive from pathological hyperactivation and caution against over-pathologizing MDQ positivity in clinical and public health settings.

## Linked entities

- **Diseases:** Bipolar Disorder (MONDO:0004985), anxiety (MONDO:0005618)

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** anxiety, (MESH:D001007), Mood Disorder (MESH:D019964), BD (MESH:D001714), Psychiatric (MESH:D001523), obsessive-compulsive, and eating disorders (MESH:D009771)

## Full text

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## References

82 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12812717/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12812717