What does mean to be bipolar?!


Question: What does mean to be bipolar!?
is that true emo people are depressed and sometimes they have moments of madness!.!. because they are bipolar!.!. doctor says I can be bipolar!.!. well how is the name to the people who is angry or irritable and sometimes happy or sad is not bipolar!?Www@Answer-Health@Com


Answers:
Bipolar disorder is a mood disorder in which feelings, thoughts, behaviors, and perceptions are altered within the context of episodes of mania and depression!. Bipolar disorder once was thought to occur rarely in youth!. However, approximately 20% of adults with bipolar disorder had symptoms beginning in adolescence!.

The DSM-IV TR uses universal symptoms to define the diagnostic criteria for mood episodes, including major depressive and manic episodes!. One true manic episode, with or without psychotic features, is the necessary and sufficient criterion by which bipolar disorder is defined as type I!. A depressive episode is insufficient for making this diagnosis, even in the presence of a strong family history of bipolar disorder!. Type II bipolar disorder is diagnosed based on the presence of at least one hypomanic episode!. Thus, bipolar disorders are viewed as a spectrum of symptoms that range from mild hypomania to the most extreme forms of mania, which may include life-threatening behaviors, dysphoria, and psychotic features!.

The hallmark symptoms of mania include an abnormal, often expansive and elevated mood lasting for at least 1 week!. Mania also may include a decreased need for sleep, racing thoughts or a sense that thoughts are "out of control," rapid and often pressured speech, increased goal-directed activities or projects, hypersexuality, reckless behaviors and risk taking, and "delusions of grandeur!." Delusions associated with mania frequently center around an expansive sense of self that goes well beyond narcissism, for example, believing oneself to have special powers, such as supernatural powers, or believing oneself to be the chosen leader of the world or universe!.

For some, the elevated and elated mood may transform into a state of dysphoria, during which agitated and irritable behaviors may develop!. Cognitive impairment in mania may be exhibited as episodes of confusion during which the flight of ideas and disorganization of thought are present!. Additionally, increased risk taking may involve endangerment of physical, emotional, or financial integrity!. Moreover, poor insight into one's disorder or behaviors and poor judgment accompany mania; thus, financial accounts or important relationships may be in such disarray as to lead to many adverse outcomes, including loss of significant friends and family support or connections, serious financial setbacks, job loss, legal problems, and homelessness!.

According to the DSM-IV TR, the criteria for a manic episode are as follows:

The individual experiences a distinct period of abnormally and persistently elevated, expansive, or irritable mood lasting at least 1 week (or any duration if hospitalization is necessary)!.

During the period of mood disturbance, 3 or more of the following symptoms have persisted (4 if the mood is only irritable) and have been present to a significant degree:

Inflated self-esteem to levels of grandiosity

Decreased need for sleep

More talkative than usual, often with pressured speech with a sense of necessity to keep talking

Flight of ideas or subjective feeling that thoughts are racing

Distractibility

Increase in goal-directed activity or psychomotor agitation

Excessive involvement in pleasurable activity that has a high potential for painful consequences (eg, hypersexuality, excessive spending, impetuous traveling)

The symptoms do not meet criteria for a mixed episode!.

The mood disturbance is sufficiently severe to cause
marked social impairment in occupational functioning, social activities, or relationships with others!.

Hospitalization may be necessary to prevent harm to self or others or if psychotic features are present!.

The symptoms are not due to the direct physiologic effects of a substance or a general medical condition!.

Hypomania is somewhat similar to mania, but it is a much less severe and less debilitating mood state than true mania!. As a less extreme mood state, hypomania is defined as an elevated mood during which (1) no hospitalization has ever been necessary and (2) no state of delusional or other psychotic thinking ever coincided with the elevated mood!. Hypomanic and manic states must cause impairment of normal functioning to be considered pathologic states!.

An abnormal behavioral episode may be designated a bipolar disorder after consideration of the frequency and type of abnormal mood!. Thus, an episode may be reported as a bipolar disorder with a single manic episode, with recurrent manic episodes, or by the mood state of the most recent episode (eg, depressed, mixed, hypomanic, manic)!. Descriptors such as "with psychosis" or "without psychosis" are used to further clarify and reflect the severity of the state of the disorder!.

Mood disturbances in children and adolescents are often more difficult to recognize and diagnose than those in adults!. Some of the difficulty arises in recognizing atypical symptoms, including irritability, tantrums, physical aggression, and other behavioral problems, as expressions of mood disruptions!. Perhaps this difficulty is best demonstrated in symptom recognition and proper, but controversial, diagnosis of bipolar disorder in youths!. The classic symptoms of mania, including racing thoughts, pressured speech, hypersexuality, and grandiosity, more often match the presentation of bipolar disorder in late adolescence!. In childhood- or prepubertal-onset bipolar disorder, such a classic cluster of symptoms is uncommon!. Nonetheless, as early as 1921, Kraepelin reported that 38% of his 900 patients who experienced manic episodes had symptom onset when younger than 20 years, and 0!.4% had onset of symptoms when younger than 10 years!.

Despite Kraepelin's early observation and description of childhood-onset and adolescent-onset bipolar disorders, the controversy about diagnosing bipolar disorder in young persons persists!. This is partially driven by the requirement of discrete episodes of disturbed mood in order to make the diagnosis of bipolar disorder!. Unlike what is noted in adults, the presence of well-defined and discrete episodes of abnormal mood is often missing in children and adolescents affected by this disorder!. Specifically, by the DSM-IV TR criteria, at least one discrete episode of mania or hypomania is necessary to make any bipolar disorder diagnosis!.

Because no distinction is made for symptoms of adult-onset, adolescent-onset, and childhood-onset bipolar disorder, clinicians are challenged to distinguish abnormal mood symptoms in adolescents and children from normal developmental behaviors, oppositional or defiant behaviors, inattention or hyperactivity, and conduct problems!. Childhood-onset bipolar disorder frequently has an insidious onset with affective storms that are often associated with the presentation of mental illness!.Www@Answer-Health@Com

yeah i have bipolar and im deffinately not the definition of "emo" these days im more of a preppy girly girl!. anyone can be bipolar, there is no name to those people except the manic depressed!.!.and we cannot be categorized in any way!. it is just an imbalance of chemicals in the brain!. celebrities like ben stiller and jim carrie even have it!. if you go from being very depressed, maybe even suicidal, hopelessness, feel no point to life!.!.to feeling like you can do anything and theres so much ahead of you!.!.have a lot of energy and get irritable and act out!.!.these mood swings may happen within one day, a week, or months!.!.that is bipolar!.Www@Answer-Health@Com

"Emo" people are not necessarily emotional or distressed with illnesses!.
Often, it's just a fad or a cute way to dress!.

People who are bipolar have a naturally low level of lithium in their bodies which cause manic episodes of highs and lows, not just happy and sad!.
These are EXTREME!. Often leading to the person getting in trouble or hurting themselves without a conscious thought!.Www@Answer-Health@Com

One textbook definition describes bipolar disorder as a major affective disorder in which an individual alternates between states of deep depression and extreme elation!. This is misleading in that bipolar disorder - also known as manic depression or manic-depressive illness - is much more complicated than just alternating between depression and elation!.

Below is the website I got that from if you want to read more on the subject!.Www@Answer-Health@Com

I agree and you will know the difference cause you can feel it and see it when you respond to others and bipolars can be harmful to others!.!.!.they often have homicidal thoughts not just suicidal!.!.!.I know I've been there three times!. Also some of the medications if you start taking them can do liver or kidney damage so watch out for what you take and be sure you do remember when you take them it makes a difference!.Www@Answer-Health@Com

ok, emo people are just an example!.!.!.
my brother suffers from bipolar disorder and he's NOT emo!.!. haha

well, basically being bipolar is just changing emotions rapidly and to the extreme!
for instance, my brother can be with us just enjoying a family dinner and literally just start flipping out and hitting things while yelling!.!.he's not able to control his emotionsWww@Answer-Health@Com

Bipolar, or manic-depressive disorder, is a mood disorder that causes radical emotional changes and mood swings, from manic highs to depressive lows!. The majority of bipolar individuals experience alternating episodes of mania and depression!.Www@Answer-Health@Com

it's a "life" on a roller coaster that never stops!.!.!.Www@Answer-Health@Com





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