“…In other studies, depression with atypical features (according to DSM-IV) has been estimated to be two times more likely in bipolar II than in unipolar patients (Benazzi, 2000(Benazzi, , 2003. In a Polish DEP-BI study, the most prominent symptoms of atypical depression, such as hypersomnia and hyperphagia were significantly more frequent in unipolar than in bipolar depressed patients (Rybakowski et al, 2005(Rybakowski et al, , 2007. Recently, hypersomnia has been recognized as an important clinical feature of bipolar depression (Forty et al, 2008) and some authors consider atypical depression as part of a broadly defined "bipolar spectrum" (Perugi et al, 1998(Perugi et al, , 2003Akiskal and Pinto, 1999;Akiskal and Benazzi, 2005).…”