Manic Depression Symptoms
November 22, 2009 by RemedyBipolarDisorder
Filed under Bipolar Disorder, Bipolar Disorder in Children
Manic depression symptoms, now better known as bipolar disorder symptoms, refers to signs a person has because of this illness. Manic depression, also known as bipolar disorder is a psychological disorder that affects one’s mood.
Basically it results in mood swings but they are no ordinary ones that most of us would face as part of the ups and downs of everyday life. Such mood swings can cause one to experience different degrees of mood states ranging from extreme highs to extreme lows. They are not character flaws but are the result of biological changes in the brain.
Estimated to affect approximately 1% of the adult population, this disorder comes in second after depression as one of the most common disorders. Both men and women are equally susceptible to this illness. In serious cases, sufferers may even resort to committing suicide to reduce their sufferings.
At present, there is no cure for bipolar disorder. However, it is a medical condition that can be treated and managed with medication. As such, it is important for all to recognize manic depression symptoms. That will allow proper treatment to be given so that relapses are minimized. While it is often agreed that bipolar disorder causes the patients’ mood to alternate between mania and depression, it is important to recognize the signs for each.

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For mania, the more common signs include reduced sleep, being more sociable, engaging in more activities and increased irritability. A milder form of mania known as hypomania can cause people to have new ideas, plans and interest, engage in more risky activities and having increased sex drive.
On the end of the spectrum, common symptoms of depression include losing interest and motivation in activities and people, having persistent worry or anxiety and having sleep disruption. Sometimes, sufferers may even have mixed symptoms as they went through experiences of mania and depression simultaneously.
The thing about manic depression symptoms is that once you are able to identify the warning signs early, you have a better chance of coming up with the appropriate strategies to reduce and even prevent a relapse.
Bipolar Ii Disorder Symptoms – Effect Of This Type Of Bipolar In Children
October 9, 2009 by RemedyBipolarDisorder
Filed under Bipolar Disorder in Children
Bipolar disorder is psychological infirmity in which your mood alternates between extreme mania or obsession, and depression or hopelessness. Make no bones about it, bipolar disorder is a disease that does not take prisoners because there are times when it does kill – about ten to fifteen percent of all bipolar disorder incidences have resulted in suicides over time.
Basically, over a ten-year period while you suffer from bipolar disorder, you tend to have about four complete cycles between mania and depression. However, some forms of the disorder can have you running through both extreme emotional poles of the condition within a single year. As a matter of fact, rapid cycling bipolar disorder can take you there and back again within a single week.
Because of its symptoms, bipolar disorder is also called manic-depressive illness. It often begins when you are in your late teens or early twenties, but it has been known to start up earlier in a few rare cases.
A type of bipolar disorder can take you through severe depression in which you experience painful sadness, negative thinking, and indifference to things that used to bring you happiness. When manic, people with bipolar disorder often feel intensely elated, self-important, energetic, and irritable. However, in this form of bipolar disorder, specifically called bipolar disorder II, your mania tends to not be as serious, often referred to as hypomania. You feel the elation, the energy, self-importance and irritation, but they are not as self-destructive as it they normally would be for bipolar disorder I.
It is not often that you find this condition in children, but it is not impossible either. You should particularly be watchful of your child if you suffer from bipolar disorder yourself, or any other type of depression for that matter. It has been proven by research that children are genetically linked to their parents in more ways than just looks. When a parent has suffered from depression of any kind before, the child is automatically susceptible due to genetics.
This was proven by experiments carried out on identical and fraternal twins. Upward of 75 percent of the time, when one identical twin had symptoms of the condition, the other twin has it too – they share the same DNA, you know. When it came to fraternal twins, the phenomenon was observed only in 10 percent of the test subjects – they share only half their DNA, once and for all proving the genetic link.
When you know that your child is predisposed to bipolar disorder, you want to be careful about their childhood experiences. There is no way to keep them from having bitter experiences, but you can help to see that they learn to manage it earlier on. That way, as they grow up, they will be better able to handle it. If you must use medication, use something in the range of lithium carbonate, but under professional supervision. It does have some side effects that you would not want your child to suffer unduly.
Personally, I favor the anger and stress management route. The Good Book after all says that you need to ‘train up a child the way he should go; when he is old he shall not depart from it.’
Bipolar Disorder In Young Children – How To Deal With The Symptom
October 8, 2009 by RemedyBipolarDisorder
Filed under Bipolar Disorder in Children
Bipolar disorder is perhaps hardest to diagnose and to treat in children. This is largely why it was believed that the syndrome often begins in your late teens and can last the whole of your life if left untreated. However, increased diagnoses due to better diagnostic means and processes in recent times have made it possible to identify bipolar disorder even in children under the age of fifteen. What was mistaken to be personality traits at one time is now understood to be bipolar disorder, and early treatments are now sought for such children.
A child who suffers from bipolar disorder will appear selfish all of the time, whether they are manic or depressive. They want their way when they are manic, and when they cannot have it, they can lapse into such a depression that they don’t even seem like they are the same person. That is perhaps one of the first symptoms of bipolar disorder you should look for in your own child


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