Bipolar Disorder
! What is Bipolar Disorder?
! Awareness
! Recognition
! Treatment
! Getting Help
! For further information contact:
WHAT IS BIPOLAR DISORDER?
Bipolar disorder, which is
also known as manic-depressive illness and will be called by both names
throughout this publication--is a mental illness involving episodes of serious
mania and depression. The person’s mood usually swings from overly “high” and
irritable to sad and hopeless and then back again, with periods of normal mood
in between.
Bipolar disorder typically
begins in adolescence or early adulthood and continues throughout life. It is
often not recognized as an illness, and people who have it may suffer
needlessly for years or even decades.
Effective treatments are
available that greatly alleviate the suffering caused by bipolar disorder and
can usually prevent its devastating complications. These include marital
break-ups, job loss, alcohol and drug abuse, and suicide.
Here are some facts about bipolar disorder.
AWARENESS
Manic-Depressive Illness Has a Devastating
Impact on Many People.
C At least 2 million Americans suffer from manic-depressive
illness. For those afflicted with the illness, it is extremely distressing and
disruptive.
C Like other serious illnesses, bipolar
disorder is also hard on spouses, family members, friends, and employers.
C Family members of people with bipolar disorder often have to cope
with serious behavioral problems (such as wild spending sprees) and the lasting
consequences of these behaviors.
C Bipolar disorder tends to run in families and is believed to be
inherited in many cases. Despite vigorous research efforts, a specific genetic
defect associated with the disease has not yet been detected.
C Bipolar illness has been diagnosed in children under age 12,
although it is not common in this age bracket. It can be confused with
attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder, so careful diagnosis is necessary.
D/ART: A National Educational Program
The National Institute of
Mental Health (NIMH) has launched the Depression/Awareness, Recognition, and
Treatment (D/ART) campaign to help people:
C Recognize the symptoms of depressive disorders, including bipolar
disorder
C Obtain an accurate diagnosis
C Obtain effective treatments
D/ART Also:
C Encourages and trains health care professionals to recognize the
signs of manic-depressive illness and utilize the most up-to-date treatment
approaches
C Organizes citizens’ advocacy groups to extend the D/ART program
C Works with industry to improve recognition, treatment, and
insurance coverage for depressive disorders
RECOGNITION
Bipolar disorder involves cycles of mania and depression.
Signs and symptoms of mania
include discrete periods of:
C Increased energy, activity, restlessness, racing thoughts, and
rapid talking
C Excessive “high” or euphoric feelings
C Extreme irritability and distractibility
C Decreased need for sleep
C Unrealistic beliefs in one’s abilities and powers
C Uncharacteristically poor judgment
C A sustained period of behavior that is
different form usual
C Increased sexual drive
C Abuse of drugs, particularly cocaine, alcohol, and sleeping
medications
C Provocative, intrusive, or aggressive behavior
C Denial that anything is wrong
Signs and symptoms of depression
include discrete periods of:
C Persistent sad, anxious, or empty mood
C Feelings of hopelessness or pessimism
C Feelings of guilt, worthlessness, or helplessness
C Loss of interest or pleasure in ordinary activities, including
sex
C Decreased energy, a feeling of fatigue or of being “slowed down”
C Difficulty concentrating, remembering, making decisions
C Restlessness or irritability
C Sleep disturbances
C Loss of appetite and weight, or weight gain
C Chronic pain or other persistent bodily
symptoms that are not caused by physical disease
C Thoughts of death or suicide; suicide attempts
It may be helpful to think
of the various mood states in manic-depressive illness as a spectrum or
continuous range. At one end is severe depression, which shades into moderate
depression; then come mild and brief mood disturbances that many people call
“the blues,” then normal mood, then hypomania (a mild form of mania), and then
mania.
Some people with untreated bipolar disorder have repeated
depressions and only an occasional episode of hypomania (bipolar II). In the
other extreme, mania may be the main problem and depression may occur only
infrequently. In fact, symptoms of mania and depression may be mixed together
in a single “mixed” bipolar state.
Descriptions provided by patients themselves offer valuable
insights into the various mood states associated with bipolar disorder:
Depression:
I doubt completely my ability to do anything well. It seems as though
my mind has slowed down and burned out to the point of being virtually useless....[I am] haunted]...with the total, the desperate
hopelessness of it all... Others say, “It’s only temporary, it will pas, you
will get over it,” but of course they haven’t any idea of how I feel, although
they are certain they do. If I can’t feel, move, think, or care, then what on
earth is the point?
Hypomania:
At first when I’m high, it’s tremendous...ideas are fast...like
shooting stars you follow until brighter ones appear...all shyness disappears,
the right words and gestures are suddenly there...uninteresting people, things,
become intensely interesting. Sensuality is pervasive,
the desire to seduce and be seduced is irresistible. Your marrow is infused
with unbelievable feeling of ease, power, well-being, omnipotence, euphoria...you
can do anything...but, somewhere this changes.
Mania:
The fast ideas become too fast and there are far too
many...overwhelming confusion replaces clarity...you stop keeping up with
it--memory goes. Infectious humor ceases to amuse. Your friends become
frightened...everything is now against the grain...you are irritable, angry,
frightened, uncontrollable, and trapped.
Recognition of the various
mood states is essential so that the person who has manic-depressive illness
can obtain effective treatment and avoid the harmful consequences of the
disease, which include destruction of personal relationships, loss of
employment, and suicide.
Manic-depressive illness is often not recognized by the patient,
relatives, friends, or even physicians.
C An early sign of manic-depressive
illness may be hypomania--a state in which the person shows a high level of
energy, excessive moodiness or irritability, and impulsive or reckless
behavior.
C Hypomania may feel good to the person who experiences it. Thus,
even when family and friends learn to recognize the mood swings, the individual
often will deny that anything is wrong.
C In its early stages, bipolar disorder
may masquerade as a problem other than mental illness. For example, it may
first appear as alcohol or drug abuse, or poor school or work performance.
C If left untreated, bipolar disorder
tends to worsen, and the person experiences episodes of full-fledged mania and
clinical depression.
TREATMENT
Most people with manic depressive illness can be helped with treatment.
C Almost all people with bipolar
disorder--even those with the most severe forms--can obtain substantial
stabilization of their mood swings.
C One medication, lithium, is usually very
effective in controlling mania and preventing the recurrence of both manic and
depressive episodes.
C Most recently, the mood stabilizing anticonvulsants carbamazapine
and valproate have also been found useful, especially in more refractory
bipolar episodes. Often these medications are combined with lithium for maximum
effect.
C Some scientists have theorized that the anticonvulsant
medications work because they have an effect on kindling, a process in which the brain becomes increasingly
sensitive to stress and eventually begins to show episodes of abnormal activity
even in the absence of a stressor. It is thought that lithium acts to block the
early stages of this kindling process and that carbamazepine and valproate act
later.
C Children and adolescents with bipolar disorder are generally
treated with lithium, but carbamazepine and valproate act later.
C Children and adolescents with bipolar disorder are generally
treated with lithium, but carbamazepine and valproate are also used.
C Valproate has recently been approved by the Food and Drug
Administration for treatment of acute mania.
C The high potency benzodiazapines
conazepam and lorazepam may be helpful adjuncts for insomnia.
C Thyroid augmentation may also be of value.
C For depression, several types of
antidepressants can be useful when combined with lithium, carbamazepine, or
valproate.
C Electroconvulsive therapy (ECT) is often helpful in the treatment
of severe depression and/or mixed mania that does not respond to medications.
C As an adjunct to medications,
psychotherapy is often helpful in providing support, education, and guidance to
the patient and his or her family.
C Constructing a life chart of mood
symptoms, medications, and life events may help the health care professional to
treat the illness optimally.
C Because manic-depressive illness is recurrent,
long-term preventive (prophylactic) treatment is highly recommended and almost
always indicated.
Getting Help
Anyone with bipolar disorder should be under the care of a
psychiatrist skilled in the diagnosis and treatment of this disease.
Other mental health professionals, such as psychologists and
psychiatric social workers, can assist in providing the patient and his or her
family with additional approaches to treatment.
Help can be found at:
C University- or medical school-affiliated programs
C Hospital departments of psychiatry
C Private psychiatric offices and clinics
C Health maintenance organizations
C Offices of family physicians, internists, and pediatricians
People With Manic-Depressive Illness Often
Need Help To Get Help
C Often people with bipolar disorder do
not recognize how impaired they are or blame their problems on some cause other
than mental illness.
C People with bipolar disorder need strong encouragement from
family and friends to seek treatment. Family physicians can play an important
role for such referral.
C If this does not work, loved ones must
take the patient for proper mental health evaluation and treatment.
C If the person is in the midst of a
severe episode, he or she may have to be committed to a hospital for his or her
own protection and for much needed treatment.
C Anyone who is considering suicide needs immediate attention,
preferably from a mental health professional or a physician; school counselors
and members of the clergy can also assist in detecting suicidal tendencies
and/or making a referral for more definitive assessment or treatment. With
appropriate help and treatment, it is possible to overcome suicidal tendencies.
C It is important for patients to
understand that bipolar disorder will not go away, that continued compliance
with treatment is needed to keep the disease under control.
C Ongoing encouragement and support are
needed after the person obtains treatment, because it may take a while to
discover what therapeutic regimen is best for that particular patient.
C Many people receiving treatment also
benefit from joining mutual support groups such as those sponsored by the
National Depressive and Manic Depressive Association (NDMDA), the National
Alliance for the Mentally Ill (NAMI), and the National Health Association.
C Families and friends of people with bipolar disorder can also
benefit from mutual support groups such as those sponsored by NDMDA and NAMI.
For more
information about Mental Illnesses -
Contact:
The
NAMI of Greater
Phone: 312-563-0445