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Icare dixit
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Default May 18, 2016 at 06:50 AM
  #1
Do you have any siblings, parents or (other) relatives with SZ or BP (or schizoaffective disorder)?

If you do, do they have the same diagnosis or a different one (or should they, probably, have)? Do you have a borderline personality?

I'm trying to ascertain whether BPD, BP-I or BP-II has different predictive value as to (blood) relatives, siblings, parents.

It might be more interesting than you think. SZ tends to be more isolated than BP, for example, and BPD might be more likely in combination with SZ (even if one doesn't also have BP).

BP-II might occur in greater isolation than BP-I. And BP-I might occur more together with SZ. Those two things are less surprising.

What's also interesting is whether BP predisposes one to marry into a family where some might have BP, SZ or BPD, in whatever way or for whatever reason.

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Default May 18, 2016 at 07:42 AM
  #2
Nope. I'm the only one with special powers
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Default May 18, 2016 at 08:37 AM
  #3
No. To my knowledge anyway.

But depression and anxiety does for sure.

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Default May 18, 2016 at 09:01 AM
  #4
I do have relatives with BP. Along with adHD autism depression anxiety and epilepsy which interestingly enough I read all can be related

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Default May 18, 2016 at 09:28 AM
  #5
It is apparent to me my mother was significantly mentally ill - likely bipolar. Interestingly enough there are a number of reatives on her side of the family that have bipolar or other mood disorders. Anxiety seems to go through my father's side. My own son's anxiety presents itself as OCD. I have wondered about my daughter's health too.
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Default May 18, 2016 at 09:45 AM
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Originally Posted by jacky8807 View Post
I do have relatives with BP. Along with adHD autism depression anxiety and epilepsy which interestingly enough I read all can be related
Just curious, would the autism be Asperger's or HFA, or classic autism?

I should actually have included unipolar depression. It's (of course) common.

ADHD (and ASD) might be common because BP isn't (yet) recognised as a neurodevelopmental disorder.

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Default May 18, 2016 at 09:54 AM
  #7
Aspergers! I read they can all be related to the same gene but theye are early studies

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One minute I held the key
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Default May 18, 2016 at 10:50 AM
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Aspergers! I read they can all be related to the same gene but theye are early studies
It's not early, but conflicting: "conflicting"/paradoxical findings.

Biochemically, there probably are more differences, but also overlap. It's difficult. Two opposing (types of) theories.

What makes it extremely difficult is that ASD overlaps with SZ and BP (the syndromes, objectively). So there's likely a lot of misdiagnoses or "inherently" invalid/immaterial diagnoses.

Autism used to be a part of schizophrenia, just a subset of its symptoms. So arguably, there are two (underlying, endophenotypical/genetic) autisms.

I strongly believe in the "diametrically opposed" theory of ASD and SZ/BP. That would mean there are a lot of misdiagnoses.

That ASD is overdiagnosed may in part be (it's very likely) that ASD is considered neurodevelopmental, unlike SZ/BP. In pretty much all cases, for mental disorder diagnostics, a diagnostic hierarchy is used, where organic disorders, like ASD, take precedence over functional psychoses, like SZ/BP. In other words, if ASD is "discovered" the clinician/diagnostician doesn't have to look further.

Another reason (for misdiagnoses) may be that ASD can be diagnosed faster than BP/SZ, since it's not episodic.

Basically, there are a lot of people with "ASD" and psychosis. There are. That doesn't make sense.

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Default May 18, 2016 at 11:04 AM
  #9
And it makes perfect sense there are conflicting findings when many with "ASD" are misdiagnosed.

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Default May 18, 2016 at 11:19 AM
  #10
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Aspergers! I read they can all be related to the same gene but theye are early studies
It doesn't mean they are misdiagnosed of course. Maybe just one mutation, unstable gene, might make the difference. Or something else.

Are they (or is he/she) a blood relative(s)? What age?

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Default May 18, 2016 at 11:34 AM
  #11
My Dad was diagnosed BP too. My grandmother was also affected, but so long ago, she never got a correct diagnosis. My sister has very similar symptoms as mine, but was diagnosed with depression, not BP. She doesn't see a psychiatrist though, so who knows on that one.
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Default May 18, 2016 at 12:06 PM
  #12
my mom is bipolar so was her dad (who I never met), but he committed suicide, which doesn't make me feel so good I guess.

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Default May 18, 2016 at 12:16 PM
  #13
Blood relative who is 17 now. He is classic CLASSIC aspergers. Definitely not misdiagnosed. You would meet him and dx him yourself in two minutes. He almost falls into more non functioning autism as he will never be able to live by himself yet he creates amazing art out of .....trash yes trash!! Very amazing stuff
Idk If all comes from same gene but in my family it we would make sense. My grandmother died in a mental Institution ect ect in my family mental illness runs hard

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I used to rule the world
Seas would rise when I gave the word
Now in the morning, I sleep alone
Sweep the streets I used to own
I used to roll the dice
Feel the fear in my enemy's eyes
Listen as the crowd would sing
Now the old king is dead! Long live the king!
One minute I held the key
Next the walls were closed on me
And I discovered that my castles stand
Upon pillars of salt and pillars of sand
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Default May 18, 2016 at 01:12 PM
  #14
Looking at all these posts, I guess I'm the odd duck... but I suppose if you look far enough up anyone's family tree, you won't find traces of BP. It has to start somewhere.

I'm the lucky one who starts BP in my family tree!

On a side note, this is partially why my pdoc was so hesitant about my BP diagnosis (and why I had a hard time accepting it). He said that BP tends to run in the family, but I have no family history.
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Default May 18, 2016 at 01:19 PM
  #15
My dad was never diagnosed but there is no doubt in my mind he had bp

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Default May 19, 2016 at 09:12 AM
  #16
My cousin (also) has BP1. He was found on the streets of a city in rags saying/believing he was Jesus Christ and the rest is Lithium history.
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Default May 19, 2016 at 09:18 AM
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Depression is pretty clear with several members of my immediate and extended family. No one that I am aware of has had a bipolar diagnosis but me, but I don't assume to know everything about everyone in my family. We all suspect something was going on with my grandmother, but she was of a generation and age that didn't seek out professional help for such things. My guess is that she probably did have bipolar disorder based on what I remember and the stories about her.
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Default May 19, 2016 at 09:20 AM
  #18
My aunt on my dad's side has bp II and PTSD and a cousin on my mom's side has bp I. My maternal grandma has generalized anxiety disorder, and my grandpa is a hoarder. My mom's brother has depression and dyslexia. My dad claims he has bp but hasn't been diagnosed. I had an aunt on my mom's side who committed suicide and based on what I remember of her I think she may have had BPD or bipolar, and I think my mom has seasonal affective disorder (the winter blues), and I'm fairly certain a cousin on my mom's side has ASPD, but these are just my speculations.
It sounds like a lot but it's a really big family so it's really only a few people.
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Default May 19, 2016 at 09:49 AM
  #19
Yes, that's very interesting! Any relatives with dyslexia?

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Default May 19, 2016 at 10:03 AM
  #20
BP1, schizophrenia, autism, adhd very strong in my family. Grandparent, Mother BP, father SZ, aunts, Uncles, 1st cousin, nieces, nephews.

My husband family the same mental health and autism very strong. I would have to marry in. My son adhd, autism, my daughter, ADD, GAD I always felt autism.

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