Abstract Bipolar Disorder is a mental illness in which a person's mood alternates between extreme mania and depression. Bipolar disorder is also called manic-depressive illness. In a related disorder called cyclothymic disorder (sometimes called Bipolar III), a person's mood alternates between mild depression and mild mania. Some people with cyclothymic disorder later develop full-blown bipolar disorder. Rates of bipolar disorder are similar throughout the world. At least fifteen percent of people
Bipolar disorder, also known as manic depression, is a common, recurrent, and debilitating mood disorder which causes extreme shifts in energy and mood. The word bipolar indicates the two main polar extremes which a person with the disorder experiences. According to NIMH, a branch of the National Institutes of Health (NIH) that oversees neurological and psychological research, this disorder affects about 2.3 million adults in the United States and about 1.2 percent of the population worldwide.
Bipolar Disorder Heather McLean HCA/240 Maryam Pirnazar 4/14/2013 Introduction Bipolar disorder is a brain disorder it can cause shifts in moods, activity level, energy, and also the ability to due day-to-day tasks. It is also commonly known as manic- depressive illness. This disorder is one of the oldest illnesses that is known. It is one of the first noticed that goes as far back and the second century. The first person that recognized the some of the symptoms
Bipolar Disorder Everyone has ups and downs in their mood; such as happiness, sadness, and anger that are normal emotions and an essential part of everyday life. In contrast, Bipolar Disorder is a medical condition in which people have mood swings out of proportion, or totally unrelated, to things going on in their lives. These swings affect thoughts, feelings, physical health, behavior, and functioning. Those who have children know it is rough enough at times to keep one’s composure, but could
illness throughout your life, and having little to no control over it. Bipolar is known as a disease that involves unpredictable profound mood swings, that can affect anyone with severe symptoms which is determined through diagnosis and observed precisely through possible causes, medications and therapies can provide help to stabilize the illness, and experts continue to research ways to treat the disease. Symptoms of bipolar range from maniac to depressive states, in which a person deals with mood
Bipolar (BP) depression is one of the main components of BP I and BP II. Both types of bipolar depression have similar symptoms, including sadness, anxiety, hopelessness, suicidal, tiredness along with issues of sleeping patterns and appetites. Most individuals who suffer from BP I and BP II are treated with pharmacological medications and psychotherapy. Interpersonal and social rhythm therapy (IPSRT) has been one of the several therapeutic approaches that have been used to treat BP depression by
ABSTRACT Bipolar disorder or manic depression causes serious shifts in mood, energy, thinking, and behavior—from the highs of mania on one extreme, to the lows of depression on the other. More than just a fleeting good or bad mood, the cycles of bipolar disorder last for days, weeks, or months. And unlike ordinary mood swings, the mood changes of bipolar disorder are so intense that they interfere with your ability to function. SYMPTOMS Bipolar Symptoms Bipolar disorder
Bipolar disorder is one of the oldest known illnesses. Extensive research reveals that there was some mention of the symptoms in early medical records, which date back to the 1600’s. Bipolar was first noticed as far back as the second century. Aretaeus of Cappadocia (a city in ancient Turkey) first recognized some symptoms of mania and depression, and felt they could be linked to each other. Aretaeus’s findings went unnoticed and unsubstantiated until 1650, when a scientist named Richard Burton wrote
that has drastically impacted my life is coping with bipolar disorder. There are plenty of common misconceptions about bipolar disorder whenever it is brought up, including quick mood swings and extreme anger. Bipolar disorder is actually a swing between manic (or hypomanic, as in my case) states and depressive states lasting at least six weeks. Thought irritation is common with bipolar disorder, mean and angry behavior typically is not. My bipolar started out as a crippling depression, causing me
Distinguish between bipolar I, bipolar II, and the cyclothymic disorder. Causes? Treatments? People with bipolar I disorder have full manic and major depressive episodes. Most of them experience an alternation of the episodes; for example, weeks of mania may be followed by a period of wellness, followed, in turn, by an episode of depression. Some, however, have mixed episodes, in which they display both manic and depressive symptoms within the same episode—for example, having racing thoughts amidst