Site icon Diseases Treatments Dictionary

Bipolar Disorder – Definition, Risk Factors and Treatment.

Definition

Bipolar disorder is a condition that features extreme shifts in mood and fluctuations in energy and activity levels that can make day-to-day living difficult. Previously known as manic depression, it is a serious mental illness that, if left untreated, can destroy relationships, undermine career prospects, and seriously affect academic performance. In some cases, it can lead to suicide.

Types of Bipolar disorders

There are four basic types of bipolar disorder:

  1. Bipolar I Disorder is mainly defined by manic or mixed episodes that last at least seven days, or by manic symptoms that are so severe that the person needs immediate hospital care. Usually, the person also has depressive episodes, typically lasting at least two weeks. The symptoms of mania or depression must be a major change from the person’s normal behavior.
  2. Bipolar II Disorder is defined by a pattern of depressive episodes shifting back and forth with hypomanic episodes, but no full-blown manic or mixed episodes.
  3. Bipolar Disorder Not Otherwise Specified (BP-NOS) is diagnosed when a person has symptoms of the illness that do not meet diagnostic criteria for either bipolar I or II. The symptoms may not last long enough, or the person may have too few symptoms, to be diagnosed with bipolar I or II. However, the symptoms are clearly out of the person’s normal range of behavior.
  4. Cyclothymic Disorder, or Cyclothymia, is a mild form of bipolar disorder. People who have cyclothymia have episodes of hypomania that shift back and forth with mild depression for at least two years. However, the symptoms do not meet the diagnostic requirements for any other type of bipolar disorder.

Historical perspective of bipolar disorder

The ancient Greeks documented the connection between depression and mania at least as early as the 2nd century AD. The Romans described manic-depression in medical texts at least as early as the 5th century. In January, 1854, at an address to the French Imperial Academy of Medicine, Jules Baillarger, a French psychiatrist and neurologist, described a condition which caused recurrent cycles of mania and depression. He named this disorder “dual-form insanity.”

In the late 19th and early 20th centuries Kraepelin studied and categorized the natural manic and depressive cycles of bipolar patients. After noticing that an acute manic or depressive period was followed by a symptom-free period, he coined the term “manic-depressive psychosis”. In the 1950s another German psychiatrist, Karl Leonhard, coined the term “bipolar” along with “unipolar” to distinguish between folks who have both mania and depression, versus depression only.

What causes and triggers bipolar disorders?

Childhood trauma

Some experts believe you may develop bipolar disorder if you experienced severe emotional distress as a child, such as:

This could be because experiencing trauma and distress as a child can have a big effect on your ability to regulate your emotions.

Stressful life events

You may be able to link the start of your symptoms to a very stressful period in your life, such as:

Self-esteem problems

Some researchers believe that a manic episode may be a way to escape from feeling very depressed or having very low self-esteem. It may be that when you feel very bad about yourself, mania increases your self-confidence to help you cope.

Brain chemistry

Evidence shows that bipolar symptoms can be treated with certain psychiatric medications, which are known to act on the neurotransmitters (messenger chemicals) in your brain. This suggests that bipolar disorder may be related to problems with the function of these neurotransmitters – and this is supported by some research. However, no one knows for certain what exactly these problems are, or what causes them.

Genetic inheritance

Medications and drugs that cause bipolar disorder

Medication, drugs or alcohol can’t cause you to develop bipolar disorder, but they can cause you to experience some bipolar symptoms.

For example:

Symptoms of Bipolar disorder

Bipolar disorder may include the following warning signs.

7 signs of mania

7 signs of depression

Risk factors of Bipolar disorder

Factors that may increase the risk of developing bipolar disorder or act as a trigger for the first episode include:

Complications

Left untreated, bipolar disorder can result in serious problems that affect every area of your life, such as:

Diagnosis of Bipolar disorder

To determine if you have bipolar disorder, your evaluation may include:

Treatment and medications to reduce bipolar disorder

To date, there is no cure for bipolar disorder. But proper treatment helps most people with bipolar disorder gain better control of their mood swings and related symptoms. This is also true for people with the most severe forms of the illness.

Because it is a lifelong and recurrent illness, people with the disorder need long-term treatment to maintain control of bipolar symptoms. An effective maintenance treatment plan includes medication and psychotherapy for preventing relapse and reducing symptom severity.

 

Medications

1. Mood stabilizing medications

These medications are commonly used as mood stabilizers in bipolar disorder:

2. Atypical antipsychotic medications

  1. Antidepressant medications

Psychotherapy

In addition to medication, psychotherapy, or “talk” therapy, can be an effective treatment.

  1. Cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) helps people with bipolar disorder learn to change harmful or negative thought patterns and behaviors.
  2. Family-focused therapy includes family members. It helps enhance family coping strategies, such as recognizing new episodes early and helping their loved one. This therapy also improves communication and problem-solving.
  3. Interpersonal and social rhythm therapy helps people with bipolar disorder improve their relationships with others and manage their daily routines. Regular daily routines and sleep schedules may help protect against manic episodes.
  4. Psychoeducation teaches people with bipolar disorder about the illness and its treatment. This treatment helps people recognize signs of relapse so they can seek treatment early, before a full-blown episode occurs. Usually done in a group, psychoeducation may also be helpful for family members and caregivers.

Electroconvulsive Therapy (ECT)

Sleep Medications

Management of Bipolar disorder

Exit mobile version