Bipolar Disorder and Gaming Disorder—Compatible or Incompatible Diagnoses?
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
3. Results
3.1. Review of the Studies That Were Published before the Formulation of the ICD-11 Criteria
3.2. Review of the Studies That Were Published after the Formulation of the ICD-11 Criteria
4. Discussion
- Up to the point that the ICD-11 criteria for GD were formulated, there were no research studies available that specifically addressed gaming, online or offline, but, rather, there were only a handful of studies that addressed IAD in general. Even after the formulation of the ICD-11 criteria, only three research studies specifically addressed gaming separately from IAD ([16,18,22]). Results from Marmet et al. [16], in fact, showed that IAD and GD had a different relationship to each other with BD. The argument against equating IAD with GD has been supported both by psychological research data [27,28] and by neurophysiological research data [29]. The formulation of the GD exclusion criterion for manic states appears to have been based entirely either on copying over the pathological gambling criteria or on some sort of anecdotal evidence presented during the consultation phase and unknown to the public. Such an approach may have been justified during the formulation of the IGD criteria in the DSM-V, since the IGD diagnosis was under review for inclusion at the time, and those criteria were meant to promote research. This is not, however, acceptable when formulating clear criteria for a disorder which is to be included in the main psychiatric taxonomy. Borges et al. [22] did employ the IGD criteria, and they found no long-term association of the IGD diagnosis with BD a year following diagnosis.
- There were a number of studies that either lacked essential data on the research population to permit safe conclusions [11,13] or had reached dubious conclusions that were unsupported by the research design [9,12]. Furthermore, the common issue with all the research studies was a failure to distinguish in which phase of BD was addictive gaming present. This is obviously hard to achieve with self-report research instruments unless they include very specific items designed to address this issue. However, this is essential information if we are to reach a conclusive diagnosis in bipolar patients who present with complaints related to potential GD.
- A very worrying issue was raised by Shao et al. [18], who presented the flip side of the coin in the diagnostic predicament; mental health professionals may attribute GD symptoms to a BD diagnosis. A patient with a behavioral addiction in some instances may resemble a patient in an episode of elevated mood: incessant involvement with gaming with little or no regard for their own well-being and obligations, reduced sleep with disturbance of sleep pattern, reduced need for food or binge-eating, aggressiveness and irritability, and lying or stealing to hide the behavior or to fund in-game purchases. This behavior will appear irrational, and the addicted gamers’ lusting over imaginary characters and fictional tales of fame could be perceived as being detached from reality when taken out of context. In the Shao et al. study, the level of inappropriate BD diagnoses that gaming addicts received was stunning, even more so considering that China has taken serious steps in combatting gaming addiction early on [30] and could be considered to be one of the most sensitized countries to this disorder.
- No article has appeared in the literature that assesses the frequency of disordered online or offline gaming during a BD episode of any type. One would argue that, if the exclusion criterion is relevant for the GD diagnosis, then there would have been a number of published case reports, case series, and studies in which disordered gaming would be evident and recordable, even quantifiable in some manner. This has not been the case here.
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Reference | Study Design | N | Country | Time-Frame | Age Range | Measures of PG and GD | Findings |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Shapira et al. [11] | Descriptive case series | 20 | US | Study published in 2000 | Adults (mean age 36.06 ± 12.0 years) | Structured Clinical Interview for Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders-IV (SCID-IV), DSM-IV criteria for ICD NOS | A total of 70.0% had a lifetime diagnosis of bipolar disorder (with 12 having bipolar I disorder). |
Park et al. [12] | Cross-sectional | 795 | South Korea | Study published in 2012 | Adolescents (mean age, 13.87 ± 1.51 years) | Internet Addiction Proneness Scale for Youth–Short Form (KSscale). The Korean version of the Child Bipolar Questionnaire (CBQ). | A total of 9.4% reported probable or definite IAD, of whom four (5.3%) were classified as probably having BD, a frequency that did not differ statistically from those students without IAD. |
Wölfling et al. [9] | Cross-sectional | 368 | Germany | Data gathered during 2010–2014 | Adults (mean age non-BD IAD 24.2 years, mean age BD IAD 26.1 years) | Scale for the Assessment of Internet and Computer Game Addiction (AICA-S) Mood Disorder Questionnaire (MDQ) | Comorbid bipolar disorders more frequent in patients meeting criteria for Internet Addiction than among the excessive users. Higher frequency of use for social networking sites was predictive for BD in IAD. |
Farahani et al. [13] | Cross-sectional | 401 | Iran | Study published in 2018 | Adults (age 18–30) | Internet Addiction Test (IAT), Millon Clinical Multiaxial Inventory—Third Edition (MCMI-III), Structured Clinical Interview for DSM (SCID-I), and semi-structured interview | “Bipolar disorders” were found to increase the odds ratio of IAD by 1,1-fold, which was the lowest of all examined psychiatric disorders except for antisocial personality disorder. |
Marmet et al. [16] | Cohort, three waves | 5516 | Switzerland | First wave 08/2010–11/2014. Third wave 4/2016–03/2018 | Adults; mean age 19.97 ± 1.22 years old at baseline and 25.47 ± 1.26 at wave 3 | Compulsive Internet Use Scale (CIUS), Game Addiction Scale, DSM-5 PG criteria | Patients with alcohol use disorder and IAD were 3.13 times more likely to have BD, while those patents with AUD and GD were not more likely to have BD. |
Di Carlo et al. [17] | Cross-sectional | 772 | Italy | Study published in 2021 | Adults; mean age 23.3 ± 3.3 years | Internet Addiction Test (IAT), Mini International Neuropsychiatric Interview | Higher severity of PUI associated with manic/psychotic symptoms. |
Shao et al. [18] | Descriptive, case series | 223 | China | Data gathered during 02/2018–07/2019 | Adults/adolescents mean age 20.5 ± 5.1 years | Clinical diagnosis with the DSM-5 and ICD-11 criteria for GD | During the first typical consultation for GD with an untrained psychiatrist, 18.4% of the patients were misdiagnosed with BD. |
Carmassi et al. [19] | Descriptive, case series | 113 | Italy | Data gathered during 11/2016–12/2018 | Adults, age range 18–60 | Structured Clinical Interview for Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders-V (SCID-V), single item for online activities | A total of 21.2% of the BD patients had IAD, with those patients reporting a higher number of traumatic events and symptoms of post-traumatic stress. |
Ohayon and Roberts [20] | Cross-sectional | 2984 | US | Data gathered during 2007 and during 2015 | Adults; mean age 22.9 ± 5.7 years | DSM-V criteria for GD, self-report for BD | BD was more often encountered in students positive for GD. |
Haghighatfard et al. [21] | Cross-sectional case-control | 16,520 patients with IAD, 18,000 controls | Iran | Data gathered during 2010–2019 | Age range 15–61 | Young’s InternetAddiction Test (YIAT), gene analysis for psychiatric disorders genes | The genetic bases of IAD had the most similarity with autism-spectrum disorders, BD, schizophrenia, and ADHD |
Borges et al. [22] | Cohort, two waves | 1741 | Mexico | First wave during 2018–2019, second wave during 2019–2020 | Adults (college students) | GD scale based on ICD-11 criteria, Composite International Diagnostic Interview Screening Scales (CIDI-SC) | No long-term associations of mental disorders with baseline IGD were found. |
Floros and Mylona [23] | Descriptive, case series | 2 | Greece | 2011–2019 | Age 23 and 25 | DSM-V diagnostic criteria for IGD, clinical diagnosis for mental disorders | GD symptoms increased during depressive phase of BD. |
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Floros, G.; Mylona, I. Bipolar Disorder and Gaming Disorder—Compatible or Incompatible Diagnoses? J. Clin. Med. 2023, 12, 6251. https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm12196251
Floros G, Mylona I. Bipolar Disorder and Gaming Disorder—Compatible or Incompatible Diagnoses? Journal of Clinical Medicine. 2023; 12(19):6251. https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm12196251
Chicago/Turabian StyleFloros, Georgios, and Ioanna Mylona. 2023. "Bipolar Disorder and Gaming Disorder—Compatible or Incompatible Diagnoses?" Journal of Clinical Medicine 12, no. 19: 6251. https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm12196251
APA StyleFloros, G., & Mylona, I. (2023). Bipolar Disorder and Gaming Disorder—Compatible or Incompatible Diagnoses? Journal of Clinical Medicine, 12(19), 6251. https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm12196251