Jan
27
2009
0

dsm iv bipolar, dsm iv diagnoses

For further information on Bipolar Treatments and Help Visit Bipolar Disorder Uncovered

Guide to dsm iv diagnoses: Mood Disorders

Looks at DSM-IV Diagnoses in the Mood Disorders category including major depression, dysthymia, and the bipolar (manic-depressive) disorders. Intended to explain to laypersons.

Mood disorders are problems with a person’s general emotional state being inappropriate to the situation. There are two types: unipolar and bipolar mood disorders. To represent them, we use a visual mood spectrum that ranges from D (major depression) at the bottom to M (mania) at the top.

dsm iv reference
We’ll look at each area of the mood spectrum, but first, let’s identify what "normal" is. Someone without a mood disorder may have changing emotional states throughout the day, but the person’s moods, the ongoing emotional tones of his or her life, are fairly stable. More importantly, the person is able to manage his or her life from one day to the next, and feels extremely good, irritable, or bad only if something happens to cause those feelings.

Unipolar Disorders

People with unipolar mood disorders get depressed and only depressed.

Dysthymia

People with dysthymia, the mildest form of unipolar depression, tend to have a chronic case of the "blahs." Things aren’t bad, exactly, it’s just that sufferers don’t enjoy much and often feel like they’re going through the motions of life without getting much gratification in return. They often feel pessimistic or "bummed out," tired, indecisive, and/or bad about themselves and their lives; they also tend to have problems with appetite and sleep patterns.

Dysthymia tends to last, and last, and last, making the disorder a long-term, low-grade problem that wears on a person. Andrew Solomon describes it well in The Noonday Demon: An Atlas of Depression

Mild depression is a gradualthing that undermines people the way rust weakens iron Like physical pain that becomes chronic, it is miserable not so much because it is intolerable in the moment as because it is intolerable to have known it in the moments gone and to look forward only to knowing it in the moments to come.

Major Depression

Major or "clinical" depression, by contrast, usually comes in "waves" that can last anywhere from two weeks to years at a time. In between episodes many people with major depression feel "normal."

People with major depression have much more severe symptoms than people with dysthymia. They don’t just feel bad about themselves, they feel worthless and hopeless; they don’t just feel indecisive, they have trouble thinking, concentrating, and making decisions. They may experience overwhelming and inappropriate guilt, lose all motivation to pursue work and hobbies, experience mental and physical sluggishness, want to sleep all the time or have trouble sleeping at all, and contemplate suicide. Other symptoms include

* Crying spells
* Poor hygiene (not bothering to brush their hair, change their clothes, or wash regularly)
* Withdrawal from friends
* Weight loss because food no longer tastes good or a need to eat (often carbohydrates) and weight gain
* Chronic pain or aches that have no physical cause
* Excessive worry and guilt
* Sleep problems: Inability to fall asleep, waking up during the night, waking up early in the morning and not being able to go back to sleep, excessive sleeping, or daytime sleepiness
* Feeling overwhelmed by daily life tasks

Abraham Lincoln struggled with a major depressive disorder and was so consumed by thoughts of suicide he was afraid to carry even a pocketknife.

I am now the most miserable man living. If what I feel were equally distributed to the whole human family, there would not be one cheerful face on the earth. Whether I shall ever be better I can not tell; I awfully forebode I shall not. To remain as I am is impossible; I must die or be better, it appears to me.

Few people realize how painful major depression really is. Sufferers drown in an unending flood of self-loathing thoughts like those described by Lesley Dormen in Planet No:

One of the many things I hate about the word "depression" is the assumption of blankness attached to it, as if the experience of depression is as absent on the inside as it looks to be from the outside. That is wrong. Depression is a place that teems with nightmarish activity. It’s a one-industry town, a psychic megalopolis devoted to a single twenty-four-hour-we-never-close product. You work misery as a teeth-grinding muscle-straining job (is that why it’s so physically exhausting?), proving your shameful failures to yourself over and over again.

Bipolar Disorders

Let’s start with terminology: Bipolar disorder and manic depression are the same thing.

German psychiatrist Emil Kraepelin, who created the first diagnostic system for psychology, brought the term "manic-depression" into common use, and it wasn’t until 1994 that the disorder’s name was changed in the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Psychological Disorders (DSM-IV) to "bipolar disorder" in an attempt to reduce the stigma that had come to be associated with it.

People with Bipolar Disorder experience both the "down" state already described in the major depression section above and an "up" state of "elevated, expansive, or irritable" moods.

In a full-blown manic state, people experience

* An increase in energy, flamboyance
* Decreased need for sleep (think little to none)
* Inflated self esteem, sometimes to the point of grandiosity
* Talkativeness to the point that they sound "pressured," as if they can’t stop talking
* Racing thoughts, which usually manifests as jumping from topic to topic, sometimes so quickly they don’t make much sense.
* Short attention span and easy distractibility (yes, this gets misdiagnosed as ADHD a lot)
* Poor judgment, often leading to decisions that are harmful, such as spending sprees, careless sex (even when married), and dangerous risk-taking
* Poor impulse control, including saying things that cause later repercussions
* Irritability and aggressiveness, including starting fights
* Strange thoughts not based in reality (delusions) and strange behaviors
* Increased sex drive
* Hallucinations (seeing, hearing, or feeling things that are not really there)

Allan Seager relates poet Theodore Roethke’s experience of mania in From The Glass House: The Life of Theodore Roethke:

"For no reason I started to feel very good. Suddenly I knew how to enter into the life of everything around me. I knew how it felt to be a tree, a blade of grass, even a rabbit. I didn’t sleep much. I just walked around with this wonderful feeling. One day I was passing a diner and all of a sudden I knew what it felt like to be a lion. I went into the diner and said to the counter-man, Bring me a steak. Don’t cook it. Just bring it.So he brought me this raw steak and I started eating it. The other customers made like they were revolted, watching me. And I began to see that maybe it WAS a little strange."

Bipolar II

People with Bipolar II have major depressive episodes, but they also have hypomania — periods of euphoria without the extremes and ridiculously poor judgment of true mania. Over the last decade, clinicians and researchers have realized that many people with recurrent depression that "resists" treatment or fails to be "cured" through normal means may also have bipolar disorder. When clinicians began treating these people with bipolar medications, most of them started to get better!

Symptoms that tend to suggest bipolar disorder even if there’s never been a manic or hypomanic episode:

* Meds tend to "wear off" after a year or two (this is called "Prozac poop-out")
* Hypomania (feeling really good and becoming very productive) on higher levels of SSRIs or stimulants
* Early onset of symptoms — bipolar disorder tends to show up in the teens; true unipolar depression doesn’t usually appear until at least the mid-20s. The earlier the onset, the more likely it is to be bipolar, and a hypomanic or manic episode just hasn’t happened yet
* High reactivity to the environment — being "moody" in response to what’s going on around you because you’re really sensitive to it
* Feeling worse during the winter
* Abuse of alcohol or drugs (the alcoholism rate in people with bipolar disorder is 60%)
* Ongoing or repeated problems with depression rather than just one or two episodes
* "Treatment resistant" depression - not getting better with standard antidepressant treatments, or even feeling worse on them
* When depressed, symptoms are "atypical" (sleeping more than 10 hours a day, appetite goes up rather than down usually for fatty and carbohydrate heavy foods, extremely low activity and energy)

Mixed States

Many people with bipolar disorder experience mixed states, which means they’re both depressed and hypomanic/manic at the same time. This tends to manifest as anger or irritability. The person has more energy than when in a pure depressive state, but still feels awful, leading to "prickly," aggressive, and/or angry feelings and behavior.

Genetics

What makes Bipolar disorder in particular a challenge is that it is a hereditary disease, and one that requires the individual to be on medication for life. It tends to get worse as one ages, partly because each time one has a manic episode, the brain becomes more prone to depression and additional manic episodes. Because hypomania and mania can feel good, it can be difficult to get people to take their medications, making them more prone to the devastating depressions.

Treatments

Because negative and "irrational" thoughts are such a big part of depression, therapy addressing them and teaching the person to think differently is one of the most effective treatments. Cognitive-behavioral therapy, which helps people identify and defeat irrational thoughts, has been shown to be particularly effective with depression, as has Interpersonal Therapy, which addresses relationships with others and ways to improve them.

Despite the importance of therapy, there are several things that indicate that medications might be a good idea:

1. There is a family history of depression, and other family members are taking (and have been helped by) medications.
2. The individual is so depressed that s/he is unable to do much work in therapy.
3. The individual is suicidal and needs symptom relief as quickly as possible.

Bipolar Disorder, by contrast, almost always requires medication, and the individual must continue that medication for life to avoid relapsing. Though hypomania and mania can feel good, they increase the likelihood of depressive episodes, so they are controlled through medication.

Individuals with bipolar disorder are often on a "cocktail" of medications including one or more antidepressants (to increase levels of the neurotransmitters serotonin and norepinephrine and thereby get rid of the depression), a mood stabilizer (to suppress hypomania and mania and to treat depression, especially treatment-resistant depressions), and sometimes an antipsychotic to reduce levels of a neurotransmitter called dopamine, which causes the delusions and hallucinations of extreme mania.

By Carolyn Kaufman
Published: 12/3/2007

For further information on Bipolar Treatments and Help Visit Bipolar Disorder Uncovered 

 

DSM IV Bipolar Criteria | Fighting Depression

The Diagnostic and Statistical Manual IV is the formal tool used by physicians to diagnose various conditions. The DSM IV bipolar criteria are well organised.

Bipolar diagnoses

Bipolar diagnoses among children were much rarer back then. According to the latest Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM-IV)

What’s New for ‘bipolar disorder’

Schizophrenia was the most frequent DSM-IV (Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders-fourth edition)


Is bipolar disorder overdiagnosed?

that fewer than half the patients previously diagnosed with bipolar disorder received a diagnosis of bipolar disorder based on a comprehensive, psychiatric diagnostic interview…  

Critique of Current Psychiatry

But in patients WITH DSM-IV bipolar disorder, suicide risk is significantly higher, and use of unstudied drugs or medications with negative data may lead to disastrous outcomes.

 

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Jan
26
2009
0

Mental Bipolar - History of Bipolar Disorder

For further information on Bipolar Treatments and Help Visit Bipolar Disorder Uncovered

History of Bipolar

The history of bipolar disorder dates back many centuries although it has only been in fairly recent times that the term ‘bipolar disorder’ has been used.

The documented history of bipolar disorder dates back as far as the time of ancient Greece, over 2000 years ago. Even then the extremes of mood - melancholia (depression) and mania were clearly identified - as remitting fluctuating illnesses.

bipolar disorder disability
It was Aretaeus of Cappadocia, a celebrated Greek physician, who first put forward that these extremes of mood were a part of the same illness, but it is not until much later that this view gained momentum.

In Paris during the 18th Century there were significant changes to how people with a mental illness were being cared for. With more compassionate treatment, the importance of observing and documenting illnesses was also emphasized, and the connection between mania and depression was again revived. This only occurred due to detailed clinical records that enabled some important re-connections to be made.

In the 1850’s the French psychiatrist Jean-Pierre Falret noted bipolar disorder as a "folie circulaire" - highlighting the circular nature of bipolar disorder, with changes from mania to depression. "Folie" in French refers to mania, madness, craziness or insanity, with the literal translation being ‘circular insanity’.

bipolar disorder pictures Around the same time Jules Baillarger a French neurologist described these extreme mood changes as being merely different phases of the same illness "folli a double forme", translated as ‘dual-form insanity’.

The German psychiatrist Emil Kraepelin in 1899 first used the term manic depressive illness to describe these phases. However, it wasn’t until much later that another German, Karl Kleist, in 1953 separated out unipolar depression where there are no periods of mania or hypomania, and the term bipolar disorder was born.

For more articles on Bipolar Disorder and for an Online Bipolar Self Help Program visit MoodSwings.

By Sue Lauder
Published: 8/22/2008

For further information on Bipolar Treatments and Help Visit Bipolar Disorder Uncovered 

 

Encouraging a Family Member with Bipolar to Get Help - Bipolar Beat

Syndicated from the Bipolar Blog Susan Asks… I believe that my sister is bipolar. She has all the symptoms. She is 36 and has two kids.

Depressed? Maybe you have Bipolar Disorder!

Everyday life for most people can be very routine. For most people the day may start by going to work, attend meetings and meet many different people.

 
Bipolar disorder - Can it affect anyone?

Bipolar disorder is a serious yet treatable illness. It is one of the very many mental disorders that is quite common nowadays. It can greatly affect a person’s vocational and social development

Bipolar Disorder Mania

Persons suffering from bipolar need to realize they are not alone. Their condition can be controlled with a proper treatment plan.

Bipolar 2: What Is It and How Can It Be Treated?

Bipolar 2 is a psychiatric disorder just as the more well-known bipolar 1 is, but it differs significantly from bipolar 1.

 
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Jan
22
2009
0

Juvenile Bipolar Disorder

For Further Information on Bipolar Treatments and Help Visit Bipolar Disorder Uncovered

Bipolar Disorder: A Disease That Drags Into Adulthood

A recent study has proven that children with bipolar disorder may grow up with the disease until their early adulthood. But unlike in young adults who are diagnosed with bipolar disorder, parents cannot simply buy Prozac or other medications for their children because they have a higher dependency rate for the medication that adults do.

For adults, diagnosing and treating bipolar disorder can be easy. They can go see a psychologist for diagnosis or buy Prozac or whatever medicine has been prescribed to them for management. However, children diagnosed with the psychological disorder require more caution when it comes to choosing medication to prescribe. This makes treating pediatric bipolar disorder much more difficult as opposed to cases in adults.

But now, a recent study done by researchers from Washington University in St. Louis shows that children who suffer from bipolar disorder may grow up to suffer the symptoms of the psychological condition as adults.

bipolar psychotic The study was done even though shadows of doubt are cast regarding the diagnosis of bipolar disorder in kids. A lot of the counter-arguments originate from significant increase in children being diagnosed with the mood disorder. Some doctors believe that the condition is rather uncommon and is being overly diagnosed, while some believe the opposite to be quite true.

The study involved 115 children, with an average age of 11, all diagnosed with bipolar disorder. Interviews were done with the kids and their parents at the beginning of the test and during the nine follow-up checkups done over the succeeding 8 years. The interviews covered the children’s symptoms, diagnoses, daily mood cycles, and how they interact with other people.

A big chunk of the participants were able to finish the study, and roughly half of the children turned 18 by the end of the observation period. In the 8-year follow-up period, the researchers were able to find out that the children’s first 3 manic episodes included psychosis and a daily shift between mania and depression. Roughly 73% of the participants relapsed, while the others were able to recover from it.

After the follow-up sessions, the group found that 44% of the children who turned 18 at the end of the study continued having manic episodes as young adults.

It still isn’t clear to researchers why some of the children no longer experienced mania once they matured, but the tests were able to provide validation that bipolar disorder may continue into adulthood in a huge population of children with the disease. The unfortunate thing about this is, compared to adults who are given medicine for the disease, children have a higher rate of dependency formation.

The research group from Washington University suggests that clinicians start informing parents of what may or may not happen. The first concerns that are always aired by parents after having their children diagnosed with manic depression is whether or not the kid would take the disease with him as he grows older. Based on the results of this recent test, doctors need to advise parents to be rather vigilant in watching their children, to avoid dragging the condition along until adulthood.

Abbey Grace Yap - About the Author:

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For Further Information on Bipolar Treatments and Help Visit Bipolar Disorder Uncovered

Coping with the Bipolar Child

Add to the mix a child with Bipolar Disorder and you have a formula for a lifetime of overwhelming feelings. Coping with the Bipolar Child does not need to take its toll on you

Bipolar Disorder - Adolescents

Bipolar illness may look different in children than in adults. Bipolar children usually have an ongoing, continuous mood disturbance that is a mix of mania and depression.

Treating Bipolar Depression

WebMD discusses treating bipolar depression. Learn all about bipolar depression and how this mood disorder is treated with medications and talk therapy.


Bipolar in Adolescents | information-overload

Because of these chances, adolescents with bipolar depression need not only take bipolar medications but also therapies and bipolar support groups as well to help them cope.

Bipolar Disorder Brain

In those with bipolar disorder, the hippocampus has lost branches that connect neurons, leading to a loss of an ability to tell the difference between danger and reward, causing a state of anxiety.

 
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Jan
20
2009
0

Manic Bipolar Disorder, Bipolar and Manic Depression

For Further Information on Bipolar Treatments and Help Visit Bipolar Disorder Uncovered 

Full Detailed Information on Bipolar Disorder

Up-to-date authoritative information about Bipolar (Manic-Depressive) disorder, its diagnosis and treatment.

There are many treatments available for bipolar disorder, ranging from medications to therapy. There are too many medications to be discussed here in depth. There are also many forms therapy can take, and techniques that can be learned to assist the patient in gaining some control over their bipolar disorder.

bipolar disorder manic episode

Symptoms

Typically, bipolar disorder is treated with more than one medication. This is due to the dual nature of bipolar disorder. Most patients need at least two medications: one to control depression and one to control mania. The combination of these two types of medication works to obtain balance in moods and stop mood cycling. Often, a third medication, called a mood stabilizer, is also prescribed. The most common mood stabilizer is Topomax.

How is bipolar disorder treated?

Popular medications for treatment of mania in bipolar patients include lithium, valproate (Depakote), carbamazepine (Tegretol), olanzapine (Zyprexa), and ziprasidone (Geodon). Lithium has long been considered the miracle drug of bipolar disorder. It is a sodium based medication that helps to balance the chemical imbalance in the brain that causes manic episodes in bipolar patients.

Valproate, or Depakote, was originally developed as a seizure medication. However, its effects on bipolar patients who have rapid cycling bipolar (moods that cycle every few hours or days rather than weeks or months), it has been quite effective. Carbamazepine, or Tegretol, is another anti-seizure medication. While it appears to have similar effects on bipolar disorder as Depakote, it has not yet been approved by the Food and Drug Administration for use as a bipolar disorder treatment.

Olanzapine, or Zyprexa, and Ziprasidone, or Geodon, are both anti-psychotic drugs, and are particularly effective for treatment of bipolar disorder in which mania becomes so severe that psychotic symptoms are present.

Medications for treatment of depression are called anti-depressants. Common anti-depressants include citalopram (Celexa), escitalopram (Lexapro), fluoxetine (Prozac), paroxetine (Paxil), and sertraline (Zoloft). All of these medications have been proven to be successful treatments for depression, although Celexa and Prozac are the most commonly prescribed.

Typically, treatment of bipolar disorder includes a combination of medications and therapy, or counseling. However, in some cases, medication may not be necessary for milder cases of bipolar disorder. In other cases, medication may not be desired by the patient, and the patient may wish to seek out other alternatives to medication for treatment of their bipolar disorder.

For these patients, Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT) can be quite effective. CBT is a method of bipolar disorder treatment that involves teaching the patient techniques to recognize triggers and symptoms of their mood cycling, and use that information and recognition to prevent the triggers from occurring, or the mood cycling from being quite as severe. Most of these techniques require the patient to develop cognitive thinking skills as well as critical thinking and problem solving capabilities. If the bipolar disorder is severe to the point that the patient is unable to engage in these thinking abilities and skills, CBT may not be a viable form of treatment in and of itself.

Overall, there are many treatments available for bipolar disorder. There are many options for the patient that can be discussed with the patient’s doctors. If a patient is not satisfied with the form their treatment is taking, they should discuss it with their doctor, and not be afraid to change doctors in order to change treatment methods. All in all, effective and successful treatment of bipolar disorder rests in the hands of the patient.

By: Tarnow2008

Article Directory: http://www.articledashboard.com

For Further Information on Bipolar Treatments and Help Visit Bipolar Disorder Uncovered 

 

Causes Of Depression and Some Helpful Tips | Bipolar Disease, Depression and Anxiety

Depression and Anxiety. Anxiety Therapy - Bipolar Disease - Fighting Depression.

The Various Types of Bipolar Diseases

Some of the more commonly used medications in the treatment of bipolar 1 include mood stabilizers, antidepressants and anti-psychotics.

Symptoms of Bipolar

Patients with bipolar symptoms and symptoms of borderline personality disorder both have the swings in mood that can have depression, anxiety, or violent outburst with them.

Bipolar Medication side effects

I was taking generic Lamictal for 4 weeks during December, but around Christmas the side effects - headache, anxiety became too much on 50mg.

Medical Tests for anxiety/depression/ADD/bipolar

Medical Tests for anxiety/depression/ADD/bipolar. Posted by Garnet71 on January 10, 2009, at 19:01:27. Has anyone had actual medical tests for anxiety, depression, ADD, bippolar?

 
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Jan
18
2009
0

The Onset Of Bipolar Disorder Symptoms

For Further Information on Bipolar Treatments and Help Visit Bipolar Disorder Uncovered

The Onset Of Bipolar Disorder Symptoms

There may come a time when you need to determine if a loved one should seek help for his or her problems. In fact, there may come a time for many when it is important to be able to recognize the onset bipolar disorder symptoms.

Bipolar disorder symptoms have three main categories. These are manic, psychotic and depressive. If several of these symptoms are occurring, it may be time to see your doctor.

Manic bipolar disorder symptoms are many & varied. They all share a similar feeling, though. Everything is much faster, grander, and bigger than life. A person in a manic state may be more active than usual. They may think and talk faster than he or she usually does. Everything about that person is exaggerated, including their overwhelming feeling of self importance.

bipolar ptsd A person like this may have grand schemes and adventures in the works. When these plans don’t pan out, that person will generally put the blame on some outside factor if, in fact, he or she takes the time to consider it at all. Usually, it’s straight off to the next idea. This is not just whimsical behavior, but is actually bipolar disorder symptoms.

When manic, people can be very reckless. They can end up doing things that effect their personal relationships or may go so far as landing them in serious trouble. Without an alertness to bipolar disorder symptoms it appears as simply a problem with their behavior. The truth is that those people generally need treatment to get better. It isn’t just a case of making up one’s mind to do the right thing.

There are also physical bipolar disorder symptoms of mania that may also be very obvious. A person who feels little or no need for food or sleep may also be in a manic state. While some may be able to carry on this way, at least for a while, most of us need rest and sustenance to maintain ourselves.

Psychotic bipolar disorder symptoms arrive mostly with mania, but can often come with mixed moods and occasionally with depressive bipolar disorder symptoms. Psychosis just refers to a break with reality. This can be in the form of hallucinations, both auditory (hearing voices, etc.) and visual. Delusions or false beliefs, are also bipolar disorder symptoms. For example, a person may falsely believe that he or she is actually some famous historical figure or celebrity.

During depression, bipolar disorder symptoms can often be easily seen if you look carefully. Apathy is a sign of depression, but other clues are even more telling. Indecisiveness and low self esteem go hand in hand in depressive bipolar symptoms.

Physical bipolar disorder symptoms of depression include tiredness, weight gain or loss, and eating or sleeping more or less than usual. The person who is displaying bipolar disorder symptoms of depression is telling the world that they simply don’t care enough take good physical care.

One should never look for trouble where it doesn’t exist. There is no need to be afraid of any slight variations in the moods or habits of a friend or loved one. However, if things just don’t seem right, it is advisable to be able to recognize bipolar disorder symptoms.

By: Mark Hargreaves

Article Directory: http://www.articledashboard.com

Mark is a life long depression sufferer and maintains a site devoted to the understanding and treatment of depression in all it’s many forms. Visit his site for more information at www.overcome-depression.com

For Further Information on Bipolar Treatments and Help Visit Bipolar Disorder Uncovered 

 

Symptoms of Bipolar

Patients with bipolar symptoms and symptoms of borderline personality disorder both have the swings in mood that can have depression, anxiety, or violent outburst with them.

The Different Types of Bipolar Disorder

This type includes those bipolar symptoms and features that don’t meet any of the categories of bipolar disorder.

Bipolar Disorder Signs

Don’t be afraid to get help for yourself or someone else you know if you suspect bipolar symptoms.

Bipolar Disorder - Adolescents

The bipolar symptoms in adolescent that are usually seen during the manic stage or mania episodes are irritable and expansive mood, unusual happiness, trouble falling asleep.

Bipolar Disorder Medication

With this post, we continue our biweekly series on medications used to treat bipolar disorder and related symptoms.

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Jan
15
2009
0

Bipolar Signs, Information on Bipolar Disorder

For Further Information on Bipolar Treatments and Help Visit Bipolar Disorder Uncovered

Recognizing Bipolar Disorder Symptoms

There may come a time when a person needs to determine if a loved one needs to seek help for his or her problems. In fact, there may come a time for many when it is important to be able to recognize bipolar disorder symptoms.

Bipolar disorder symptoms fall into three main categories. These are manic symptoms, psychotic symptoms, and depressive bipolar disorder symptoms. If several of these symptoms are occurring, it may be time to go in for a consultation.

bipolar disorder signs and symptoms

Manic bipolar disorder symptoms are numerous. They all share a certain feeling, though. Everything is faster, grander, and generally bigger than life. A person in a manic state may be much more active than usual. He or she may think and talk faster than he or she usually does. Everything about that person is exaggerated, including his or her overwhelming feeling of self importance.

Such a person may have grand schemes and adventures in the works. When these plans don’t pan out, that person will generally put the blame on some extraneous factor if, in fact, he or she takes the time to consider it at all. Usually, it’s simply off to the next idea. These are not just whimsical behaviors, but are actually bipolar disorder symptoms.

When manic, people tend to be reckless. They can end up doing things that effect their personal relationships or may go so far as landing them in jail. This may be seen by someone who is not alert to bipolar disorder symptoms as simply a problem with their conduct. The truth is that those people probably need treatment to do better. It isn’t just a matter of making up one’s mind to do the right thing.

There are also physical bipolar disorder symptoms of mania that may be quite obvious. A person who feels little or no need for food or sleep may turn out to be in a manic state. While some may be able to function this way, at least for awhile, most of us need rest and sustenance to maintain ourselves.

Psychotic bipolar disorder symptoms come mostly with mania, but can come often with mixed moods and occasionally with depressive bipolar disorder symptoms. Psychosis merely refers to a break with reality. This can come in the form of hallucinations, both auditory (hearing voices, etc.) and visual. Delusions, or false beliefs, are also bipolar disorder symptoms. For example, a person may falsely believe that he or she is actually some famous historical figure.

During depression, bipolar disorder symptoms can often be easily seen if one is willing to look carefully. Apathy may be a sign of depression, but other clues are even more telling. Indecisiveness and low self esteem seem to go hand in hand in depressive bipolar symptoms.

Physical bipolar disorder symptoms of depression include fatigue, weight gain or loss, and eating or sleeping more or less than usual. The person who is displaying bipolar disorder symptoms of depression seems to be telling the world that he or she simply doesn’t care enough take good physical care.

One should never look for trouble where there is none. There is no need to be afraid of any slight variation in the moods or habits of a loved one. However, if things just don’t seem right, it doesn’t hurt to be able to recognize bipolar disorder symptoms.

By: Li Ming Wong

Article Directory: http://www.articledashboard.com

To learn more, check out Bipolar Disabilities Guide.

For Further Information on Bipolar Treatments and Help Visit Bipolar Disorder Uncovered 

 

Bipolar Disorder Symptoms: What Is the Cause of Bipolar Disorder?

Bipolar disorder symptoms - a mental health problem characterized by an alternation between extreme euphoria and deep depression.

Bipolar Disorder Medication

Do not be discouraged if you have been diagnosed with bipolar disorder. There are bipolar medications available that will help you, both get well and stay well.

Bipolar Disorder and Work Tiredness

I always say that I wish I could work full time. I really, really love to work full time. I mean 40 hours a week- the normal stuff. I keep thinking I can do it. 

Are Schizophrenia and Bipolar Disorder related?

Schizophrenia and bipolar disorder have the same genetic causes, according to a study from Karolinska Institutet published today in the highly respected journal The Lancet.

Bipolar Disorder and Sleep


I’ve written a lot about Lamictal and Generic Lamictal (Lamotrigine) the past few months. This is the drug I take as do many other people with bipolar disorder. 

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Jan
15
2009
0

Bipolar Treatments, Drugs and Bipolar Therapy

For Further Information on Bipolar Treatments and Help Visit Bipolar Disorder Uncovered

The Symptoms and Treatment of Bipolar Disease

Bipolar disease is often described as a disorder in which a person alternates between two states: a manic and a depressive state. When a person moves from one state to the other, the disorder can affect the behavior and personality of a person.

In the world of psychological disorders there are few that are more difficult to deal with than bipolar disease. Although dealing with a bipolar disorder is anything but easy the reasons it is hard to deal with is easy to see when one considers that those who suffer its affects are cycling between two psychological states: Depression and mania. This cycling between these two states can have serious affects on the personality and behavior that its sufferers exhibit.

list of treatments for bipolar

Within the diagnosis of bipolar disease there are several subtypes of the disorder itself. These include: rapid cycling bipolar, teen bipolar disorder, and types I and II. Being properly diagnosed is important when it comes to deciding on which treatment regimen to follow.

Bipolar disease sufferers exhibit many of the same type of symptoms with each person experiencing these symptoms to varying degrees of severity depending on which cycle of the disorder they are in. When experiencing a manic episode they will usually experience intense feelings of pleasure and/or happiness. Their creativity and motivation are at a high point, which helps explain why many successful writers and musicians show the signs of bipolar disease and are diagnosed with it. During the manic episode those with this disorder will also talk incessantly while feeling that they are not getting their point across to whoever they are talking to. In more severe cases this manic state can cross over into more dangerous territory and include symptoms like hostile behavior, destruction of property and hallucinations and delusions.

At the other extreme of bipolar disorder is depression. When the bipolar sufferer is in this state they will exhibit feelings of despair and hopelessness, lose interest in work and family, show signs of anxiety, lose interest in sex, have trouble getting out of bed and suicidal thoughts. The depression side of bipolar disease can also manifest physical symptoms such as headaches, stomach and digestive issues, weight gain or loss, social withdrawal and for some abuse of drugs and/or alcohol.

Bipolar disease can be treated with a combination of psychotherapy and prescription medications. The first step any one who suffers from this disorder must take is getting a diagnosis from a psychiatrist or psychologist before any medications or therapies can begin. SSRI’s and MAOI’s are the two groups of antidepressant drugs most commonly used to combat the symptoms of bipolar disease, but because of the severity of this condition psychotherapy is also highly recommended in conjunction with any drug therapy.

The battle with bipolar disease can last a lifetime. Bipolar disease can destroy the lives of those who suffer it and can have a profound negative affects on those close to those who have it. Because of this it is important that not only those who suffer with this condition get proper treatment but family and friends are not only supportive but also seek to understand what this disease is doing to their loved one and why they are exhibiting the behaviors they do.

Andrew Bicknell is a writer and the owner of Depression and You. Visit his website for more information about bipolar disease and other depressive disorders.

By Andrew Bicknell
Published: 1/6/2007

For Further Information on Bipolar Treatments and Help Visit Bipolar Disorder Uncovered 

 

Symptoms and Signs of Bipolar Disorder

But don’t worry because bipolar today is treatable. There have been major breakthroughs in the field of bipolar treatment.

Bipolar Disorder Medication

Older prescriptions are antipsychotic drugs such as Haldol or Thorazine. These have been prescribed and are effective in the treatment of bipolar disorder.

Treatment to Help You Deal With Bipolar Disorder

Electroconvulsive Therapy - If medications have been unsuccessful in treating depression in bipolar, this therapy is very successful.

Selecting a Bipolar Drug

The appropriate bipolar drug can yield excellent results in the treatment of manic depression.

Bipolar Drugs for Managing Bipolar Disorder

Bipolar disorder can affect a person’s behaviour, perceptions, feelings and thoughts. It can even affect how an individual feels physically.


 

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