Bipolar disorder symptoms

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Bipolar Disorder Symptoms psychcentral.com/disorders/bipolar/bipolar-disorder-symptoms/ December 16, 2016

Bipolar disorder symptoms are characterized by a cycling of mood swings between feelings of great energy and activity (known as manic or hypomania) and feelings of sadness, hopelessness, and being blue (known as depression). Bipolar symptoms come in cycles, which tend to last anywhere from days to months at a time. The defining symptom of bipolar disorder (also known as “manic depression”) is the presence of severe mood swings — episodes between feeling great highs to feeling great lows, including depression (American Psychiatric Association, 2013). When in the highs, a person with bipolar symptoms may feel like they are “on top of the world,” able to accomplish anything they set their mind to, with the desire to do a dozen things all at once (finishing none of them). Sometimes this high appears as greater irritability in the person, rather than an elevated mood. In its early stages, the symptoms of bipolar disorder may masquerade as a problem other than mental illness. For example, it may first appear as alcohol or drug abuse, or poor performance at school or work. Bipolar symptoms generally don’t come and go quickly — they are persistent and significantly impair the person’s life (Caponigro & Lee, 2012). This condition is sometimes prone to being misdiagnosed as depression, because the person experiences hypomanic, rather than manic, episodes. (Hypomania can be mistaken for normal, goal-directed activity if not carefully assessed by a mental health professional.) Bipolar disorder in children is different, with a different set of symptoms. In children, bipolar disorder is known as disruptive mood dysregulation disorder.

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