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Affective temperaments in clinical practice: A validation study in mood disorders

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2012
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Vöhringer Cárdenas, Paul Alfred
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Affective temperaments in clinical practice: A validation study in mood disorders
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  • Vöhringer Cárdenas, Paul Alfred;
  • Whitham, E. A.;
  • Thommi, S. B.;
  • Holtzman, N. S.;
  • Khrad, H.;
  • Ghaemi, S. N.;
Abstract
Background: We sought to examine correlations between clinical validators and temperaments in clinical practice. Methods:We provided the self-report TEMPS-A (50 itemlong) to 123 consecutive patients seen in theMood Disorders Programof Tufts Medical Center. Temperamentwas assessed as cyclothymia, dysthymia, irritable or hyperthymia. Cut-offs were tested using (50%) and (75%) thresholds of affirmative responses, as well as highest percent for dominant temperament. We reported no dominant temperament at 75% cut-off . Multivariate regression modeling was conducted to assess confounding bias. Results: Using clinical and demographic validators, cyclothymia was the most strongly validated temperament, followed by dysthymia and hyperthymia. Irritable temperament did not appear to be valid in this sample. A 75% item endorsement cut-off appeared to identify clinically important temperaments in slightly less than half of this sample. Those without any temperament at 75% cut-off had better prognostic features. 50% cut-off was highly nonspecific, and poorly correlated with diagnostic validators. Conclusions: Affective temperaments correlate with clinical validators,most robustly for cyclothymia. 75% cut-off on the TEMPS may provide a useful categorical definition of abnormal affective temperaments in mood disorders. With that definition, slightly less than one-half of patients with mood disorders have affective temperaments. Those without abnormal affective temperaments have better prognostic features.
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URI: https://repositorio.uchile.cl/handle/2250/124255
DOI: doi:10.1016/j.jad.2011.10.028
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Journal of Affective Disorders 136 (2012) 577–580
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