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1 anticipation may be a potential biomarker of bipolar II disorder.
2    Little is known about the neurobiology of bipolar II disorder.
3 tions appear to be greater in bipolar I than bipolar II disorder.
4 tes, consequences, and treatment patterns of bipolar II disorder.
5 , informing us on the severe consequences of bipolar II disorder.
6 , with effects that appear to be specific to bipolar II disorder.
7 l indicating that the effect was specific to bipolar II disorder.
8 horts of patients with bipolar I disorder or bipolar II disorder.
9 kely to experience hypomania than those with bipolar II disorder.
10 orbidity between patients with bipolar I and bipolar II disorder.
11 s conducted in 75 patients with bipolar I or bipolar II disorder.
12  episodes associated with both bipolar I and bipolar II disorders.
13 observed both in patients with bipolar I and bipolar II disorders.
14 d reward circuitry function in bipolar I and bipolar II disorders.
15  (30.8%) than the 59 trials in patients with bipolar II disorder (18.6%).
16 -17 years with bipolar I disorder (77.5%) or bipolar II disorder (22.5%) and a Young Mania Rating Sca
17 olar I disorder (479 pregnancies/283 women), bipolar II disorder (641/338), or recurrent major depres
18 tron emission tomography in 13 patients with bipolar II disorder and 14 healthy comparison subjects.
19 ulting in revision of diagnoses for 12.2% to bipolar II disorder and 7.5% to bipolar I disorder.
20                                              Bipolar II disorder and bipolar spectrum disorder had an
21 ) in pediatric outpatients with bipolar I or bipolar II disorder and concurrent ADHD whose manic symp
22 ld with a clinical diagnosis of bipolar I or bipolar II disorder and experiencing a major depressive
23 f rarity between the depressive syndromes of bipolar II disorder and major depressive disorder; bipol
24 agnostic Criteria diagnoses of bipolar I and bipolar II disorder and were of British or Irish ancestr
25 onship between bipolar disorders (especially bipolar II disorder) and depressive disorders seems to s
26 continuity between bipolar disorders (mainly bipolar II disorder) and major depressive disorder was s
27 time prevalence rates of bipolar I disorder, bipolar II disorder, and bipolar spectrum disorder.
28 le with bipolar I disorder versus those with bipolar II disorder, and in people with bipolar disorder
29 d episodes in women with bipolar I disorder, bipolar II disorder, and recurrent major depression (RMD
30   The attentional resources of patients with bipolar II disorder are not reallocated when they are co
31        Risks were lower in women with RMD or bipolar II disorder, at approximately 40% per pregnancy/
32 r type (SAB), bipolar I disorder (BD I), and bipolar II disorder (BD II) differ according to the prom
33                                              Bipolar II disorder (BD-II) is currently identified by b
34 n healthy control subjects and patients with bipolar II disorder (BD-II).
35 remains whether bipolar I disorder (BDI) and bipolar II disorder (BDII) differ etiologically.
36 in various countries for bipolar I disorder, bipolar II disorder, bipolar spectrum disorder, and schi
37 ffective symptom severity and polarity or to bipolar II disorder (BP-II).
38  history of the weekly symptomatic status of bipolar II disorder (BP-II).
39  cases of BPI disorder, 498 individuals with bipolar II disorder (BPII) and 702 subjects with recurre
40  least one other member affected with BPI or bipolar II disorder (BPII), we identified four regions s
41 as greatest in pairs where both siblings had bipolar II disorder (BPII).
42  presence of a syndromal, manic episode, and bipolar II disorder, defined by the presence of a syndro
43            Predictors of recurrence included bipolar II disorder diagnosis, earlier onset, more recur
44 pants (N=66) were patients with bipolar I or bipolar II disorder enrolled in the NIMH Systematic Trea
45         Subjects (N=3,750) with bipolar I or bipolar II disorder enrolled in the Systematic Treatment
46  of the first 500 patients with bipolar I or bipolar II disorder enrolled in the Systematic Treatment
47 rom the first 500 patients with bipolar I or bipolar II disorder enrolled in the Systematic Treatment
48 f lumateperone in patients with bipolar I or bipolar II disorder experiencing a major depressive epis
49  of major depressive disorder (94 cases) and bipolar II disorder (five cases).
50          From 345 patients with bipolar I or bipolar II disorder followed up for a mean (SD) of 13.7
51  goal was to determine whether patients with bipolar II disorder had altered regional brain responses
52  showed that the lifetime prevalence rate of bipolar II disorder in adults across 11 countries was 0.
53                                     Rates of bipolar II disorder in prospective studies of adolescent
54 uced life satisfaction, and a higher rate of bipolar II disorder in relatives.
55  152 depressed outpatients with bipolar I or bipolar II disorder in the multisite Systematic Treatmen
56 ng 1,177 patients with bipolar I disorder or bipolar II disorder, including 458 individuals treated w
57  schizophrenia, driven by psychosis, whereas bipolar II disorder is more strongly correlated with maj
58 h bipolar I disorder (n=4270) and those with bipolar II disorder (n=1939) showed no difference in the
59 7-17 years) with bipolar I disorder (N=244), bipolar II disorder (N=28), and bipolar disorder not oth
60 ive disorder (N=224), panic disorder (N=75), bipolar II disorder (N=62), or bipolar I disorder (N=37)
61 ith major depressive disorder and seven with bipolar II disorder; one patient in the major depression
62  had been diagnosed with bipolar I disorder; bipolar II disorder; or schizoaffective disorder, bipola
63 fty-nine patients with bipolar I disorder or bipolar II disorder participated in a total of 228 acute
64                                              Bipolar II disorder predicted both alcohol abuse/depende
65 on subgroup was later reclassified as having bipolar II disorder) receiving SCC DBS for 4-8 years.
66 I disorder, the neural mechanisms underlying bipolar II disorder remain unknown.
67                                 The euthymic bipolar II disorder subjects showed greater fear recogni
68         In comparison with major depression, bipolar II disorder was associated with the development