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- From: barry@webveranda.com (Barry Campbell)
- Newsgroups: soc.support.depression.manic,alt.support.depression.manic,soc.answers,alt.answers,news.answers
- Subject: Bipolar Disorder FAQ v 1.1 (1 of 4)
- Followup-To: poster
- Date: 25 Sep 1996 14:58:34 GMT
- Organization: CCSL
- Lines: 825
- Approved: news-answers-request@MIT.EDU
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- NNTP-Posting-Host: cnc80244.concentric.net
- Summary: This article contains information about Bipolar Disorder,
- based on contributions by readers and participants in
- Usenet support groups.
- Archive-name: support/depression/bipolar-faq/part1
- Posting-Frequency: monthly
- Xref: senator-bedfellow.mit.edu soc.support.depression.manic:4335 alt.support.depression.manic:4680 soc.answers:6153 alt.answers:20703 news.answers:82677
-
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------
- | |
- | Bipolar Disorder Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ) File |
- | ------------------------------------------------------ |
- | |
- | |
- | Version: 1.1 |
- | |
- | Release Date: 25 September1996 |
- | |
- | Usenet Newsgroups: alt.support.depression.manic (ASDM) |
- | soc.support.depression.manic (SSDM) |
- | |
- | Maintainers: Barry Campbell (barry@webveranda.com) |
- | http://webveranda.com/barry/ |
- | |
- | Marco Anglesio (anglesio@cspo.queensu.ca) |
- | http://cspo.queensu.ca/~anglesio |
- | |
- | Archived at: http://www.moodswing.org/faq.html |
- | http://cspo.queensu.ca/~anglesio/faq |
- | |
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
- ******************************************************************************
-
- DISCLAIMER AND COPYRIGHT NOTICE
- (IMPORTANT - PLEASE READ)
-
- The information presented in this FAQ is derived from published and unpublished
- sources, and from the experiences and contributions of readers of the Usenet
- newsgroups alt.support.depression.manic and soc.support.depression.manic.
-
- Some of it is fact. Some of it is opinion. Some of it might well be
- controversial in some circles. NONE of it should be relied upon as expert
- opinion. This FAQ is provided as-is, without any express or implied
- warranties.
-
- While we have made every effort to make it as accurate, responsible, and
- helpful as possible, this FAQ is NOT the place to go if you're seeking expert
- medical, psychological, or legal advice. The authors, maintainers, and
- contributors responsible for the content of this FAQ assume no responsibility
- for errors or omissions, or for damages resulting from the use of the
- information contained herein.
-
- If you have questions or concerns, contact a psychiatrist, psychologist,
- licensed clinical social worker, pharmacist, nurse, other qualified and
- licensed therapist or practitioner, or attorney, as the case may be.
-
- This FAQ may contain short, excerpted material from texts or
- electronic media. Where materials are directly quoted, complete references
- have been cited. The Bipolar Disorders FAQ has been assembled for educational
- and informational purposes only, and with no intent to profit; it is
- distributed free of charge. No violation of U.S. copyright law is intended; all
- quotations are made under the "Fair Use" doctrine. All authors of quoted
- material retain full copyright protection.
-
- The definitions of disorders used throughout this FAQ are those found in
- "Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders," Fourth Edition
- (American Psychiatric Association, 1994). To obtain your own copy of this
- and other American Psychiatric Association publications in book or digital
- form, contact:
-
- American Psychiatric Association
- 1400 K Street, NW; Suite 1101
- Washington, DC 20005-2403
-
- Phone: 1-800-368-5777 (M-F, 9 a.m.-5 p.m., EST)
- Fax: 1-202-789-2648
- http://www.appi.org
-
- This FAQ may be posted to any USENET newsgroup, on-line service, or BBS,
- or pointed to or included on any WWW page, as long as it is posted in its
- entirety and includes this copyright statement.
-
- This FAQ may not be distributed for financial gain.
-
- This FAQ may not be included in commercial collections or compilations
- without express permission from the author(s).
-
- ALL MATERIAL HEREIN NOT EXPRESSLY COVERED BY OTHER COPYRIGHT NOTICES IS
- COPYRIGHT 1996, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED, UNDER UNITED STATES LAW AND THE BERNE
- CONVENTION BY THE PRIMARY MAINTAINER, BARRY CAMPBELL (btc@concentric.net). THE
- AUTHOR OF ALL UNATTRIBUTED MATERIAL FOR PURPOSES OF THE BERNE CONVENTION IS
- BARRY CAMPBELL. THIS FAQ MAY NOT BE USED OR REPRODUCED IN CD-ROM COLLECTIONS,
- PRINTED REPRODUCTIONS, OR ANY OTHER MEDIA FORMAT WITHOUT EXPRESS WRITTEN
- PERMISSION.
-
- ******************************************************************************
-
-
-
- -----------------
- TABLE OF CONTENTS
- -----------------
-
-
- 1.0 Introduction and Acknowledgments to Contributors
-
-
- 2.0 Revision history and archive locations
-
-
- 3.0 Definitions (DSM-IV and "Extended")
-
- 3.1 What is Bipolar Disorder?
- 3.2 What is Depression?
- 3.3 What is Mania?
- 3.4 What is Hypomania?
- 3.5 What is the difference between euphoria and dysphoria?
- 3.6 What is a Mixed State?
- 3.7 What is Rapid Cycling?
- 3.8 What are delusions and hallucinations?
- 3.9 How do you tell unipolar depression and bipolar
- disorder apart?
- 3.10 What is Cyclothymia?
- 3.11 What is Dysthymic Disorder?
- 3.12 What is Schizoaffective Disorder?
- 3.13 What is Seasonal Affective Disorder?
- 3.14 How do I distinguish between and among all of
- these disorders?
-
-
- 4.0 How can I best take care of myself?
-
- 4.1 How can I assess my own mental status?
- (Includes: The Goldberg Depression and Mania
- Self-Rating Scales)
- 4.2 What treatment options are available?
- 4.3 How do I find a good health care provider?
- 4.4 What medications are commonly used in treatment?
- 4.5 What "alternative" therapies exist, and are they
- any good?
- 4.6 How do I pay for all this? (Insurance-related
- issues.)
- 4.7 What are my rights as a patient?
- 4.8 What are my rights as a person with Bipolar Affective
- Disorder?
- 4.9 How can I tell my (friends, family, coworkers)? Should I?
- 4.10 Resource organizations
-
-
- 5.0 How do I help a friend or loved one?
-
- 5.1 What to do (and what not to do) when someone you care
- about is diagnosed
- 5.2 What to do (and what not to do) if you suspect that
- someone you care about needs help, but resists
- seeking it for themselves.
-
-
- 6.0 Resources for education and support
-
- 6.1 Internet Resources
- 6.2 Books
- 6.3 Magazine and Journal Articles
-
-
- 7.0 Controversial Issues - making sense of them
-
- 7.1 To drug, or not to drug?
- 7.2 Should I participate in a study or other
- research program?
- 7.3 How do I evaluate "alternative" therapies?
- 7.4 The Psychiatric Survivors' Movement
- 7.5 Critics of Psychiatry and Psychology
-
-
- 8.0 Is there life (and hope) after diagnosis?
-
- 8.1 Coping hints from readers and participants
- 8.2 Research trends and directions
-
-
-
-
- -----------------------------------------------------------------------------
- 1.0 Introduction and Acknowledgments to Contributors
- -----------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- The Bipolar Disorder FAQ is based largely on the FAQ from the Usenet newsgroup
- alt.support.depression.manic. The alt.support.depression.manic FAQ was
- originated and maintained until recently by PsyberNut/Bipolar Bear/Scott
- (lsm@crl.com), and this FAQ document contains much of his original work,
- essentially unmodified; in particular, the "more complete list of symptoms"
- sections are his writing. We gratefully acknowledge our enormous debt to
- Scott, and wish him the very best.
-
- Many readers of alt.support.depression.manic (ASDM) and
- soc.support.depression.manic (SSDM) have contributed directly and indirectly to
- the development of this FAQ; many more have read it and offered comments and
- criticism. So have readers and contributors to the PENDULUM mailing list.
-
- A few contributors, in particular, must be singled out for their extraordinary
- contributions. Thanks to:
-
- Joy Ikelman (parrot@frii.com), who allowed us to ransack her "Media File," an
- excellent resource for finding mood disorder information and references in
- print. Joy also completely rewrote and updated the "definitions" section of
- the FAQ, based on DSM-IV, and read early drafts, giving many helpful editorial
- criticisms along the way.
-
- Millie Niss (millie@gauss.math.brown.edu), for her well-researched
- contributions to the Drug Therapy section of the FAQ.
-
- Dr. Ivan K. Goldberg, M.D (psydoc@netcom.com) for his permission to reproduce
- the Goldberg Depression and Mania Scales.
-
-
- -----------------------------------------------------------------------------
- 2.0 Revision history and archive locations
- -----------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- This is Version 1.1 of the Bipolar Disorder FAQ, released 25 September 1996.
-
- This FAQ is posted periodically to the Usenet newsgroups
- alt.support.depression.manic and soc.support.depression.manic.
-
- The current version of the Bipolar Disorder FAQ may always be found on
- the World Wide Web at:
-
- http://www.moodswing.org/faq.html (in the US) and
- http://cspo.queensu.ca/~anglesio/faq (in Canada)
-
- We're always looking for folks who are willing to locate the FAQ for
- us in their own countries. The Web IS international by definition,
- but it's always nicer to hit a nearby server if you can. :-)
-
- It is also available via anonymous FTP from
-
- ftp://members.aol.com/bipolarfaq/public/
-
-
- -----------------------------------------------------------------------------
- 3.0 Definitions (DSM-IV and "Extended")
- -----------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- There are many different mood disorders, and discussing them all thoroughly is
- beyond the scope of this FAQ.
-
- This FAQ focuses on the mood disorders which tend to be characterized by "mood
- swings": alternating cycles of abnormally depressed and elevated (manic)
- moods. You're up, you're down, you're up, you're down, you're up... and some
- (or most) of the time, you're in the middle, trying to figure out what happened.
-
- While reading these definitions, it may be useful to think of Bipolar Disorder
- and related disorders as existing along a continuum of "affects," or moods.
-
-
- ------------------------------
- 3.1 What is Bipolar Disorder?
- ------------------------------
-
- Bipolar Disorder is the medical name for Manic Depression; at various times, it
- has also been known as Bipolar Affective Disorder and Manic-Depressive Illness.
- It is a mood disorder that affects approximately 1% of the adult population of
- the United States--and roughly the same percentage in other countries, as far
- as we know. :-)
-
- It's in the same family of illnesses (called "affective disorders") as clinical
- depression. However, unlike clinical depression, which seems to affect far more
- women than men, Bipolar Disorder seems to affect men and women in approximately
- equal numbers.
-
- It's characterized by mood swings. Though there is no known cure, most forms
- of bipolar disorder are eminently treatable with medication and supportive
- psychotherapy.
-
- The textbook definition of Bipolar Disorder is: one or more Manic or Hypomanic
- Episodes, accompanied by one or more Major Depressive Episodes. These episodes
- typically happen in cycles.
-
- All of these terms will be defined at greater length below...but in plain
- English, a person who has Bipolar Disorder will be severely up some of the
- time, severely down some of the time, and in the middle some or most of the
- time.
-
- There are two main types of Bipolar Disorder:
-
- -- Bipolar I is the "classic" form of Bipolar Disorder. It most often involves
- widely spaced, long-lasting bouts of mania followed by long-lasting bouts of
- depression and vice-versa. However, the essential definition is depression
- plus mania, or "mixed states."
-
- -- Bipolar II involves at least one Hypomanic Episode and one Major Depressive
- Episode, but never either a full-blown Manic Episode or Cyclothymia. The
- essential definition is depression plus hypomania.
-
- Although the shifts from one state to another are usually gradual, they can be
- quite sudden. The "rapid-cycling" form of the disorder involves four or more
- complete mood cycles within a year's time, and some rapid-cyclers can complete
- a mood cycle in a matter of days--or, more rarely, in hours.
-
- It is also possible for someone who has Bipolar Disorder to be in a "mixed
- state." This means that they're in a mood state which has some characteristics
- of depression and some of mania or hypomania.
-
- There are a few rare documented cases of mania without depression, but DSM-IV
- does not currently include a category for just "mania". (This diagnosis was
- present in DSM-III, but is unaccountably absent in DSM-IV!)
-
- Using DSM-IV, a person exhibiting the symptoms of mania will almost always be
- diagnosed as bipolar. The general feeling in the mental health community seems
- to be that what or whom goes up, must eventually come down.
-
- The DSM-IV and "extended" definitions of depression and mania are presented in
- the sections that follow. It is very important to remember the following:
-
- -- These definitions are not a guide for self-diagnosis!
-
- -- One does not need to exhibit *all* of the symptoms of depression to be
- depressed, nor does one need to display *all* of the symptoms of mania to be
- manic.
-
-
- ------------------------
- 3.2 What is Depression?
- ------------------------
-
-
- ******************************************************************************
-
- Criteria for Major Depressive Episode (DSM-IV, p. 327)
-
- A. Five (or more) of the following symptoms have been present during the same
- 2-week period and represent a change from previous functioning; at least one
- of the symptoms is either (1) depressed mood or (2) loss of interest or
- pleasure.
-
- Note: Do not include symptoms that are clearly due to a general medical
- condition, or mood-incongruent delusions or hallucinations.
-
- (1) depressed mood most of the day, nearly every day, as indicated by either
- subjective report (e.g., feels sad or empty) or observation made by others
- (e.g. appears tearful). Note: In children and adolescents, can be irritable
- mood.
-
- (2) markedly diminished interest or pleasure in all, or almost all, activities
- most of the day, nearly every day (as indicated by either subjective account
- or observation made by others)
-
- (3) significant weight loss when not dieting or weight gain (e.g., a change of
- more than 5% of body weight in a month), or decrease or increase in appetite
- nearly every day. Note: In children, consider failure to make expected weight
- gains.
-
- (4) insomnia or hypersomnia nearly every day
-
- (5) psychomotor agitation or retardation nearly every day (observable by
- others, not merely subjective feelings of restlessness or being slowed down)
-
- (6) fatigue or loss of energy nearly every day
-
- (7) feelings of worthlessness or excessive or inappropriate guilt (which may
- be delusional) nearly every day (not merely self-reproach or guilt about being
- sick)
-
- (8) diminished ability to think or concentrate, or indecisiveness, nearly
- every day (either by subjective account or as observed by others)
-
- (9) recurrent thoughts of death (not just fear of dying), recurrent suicidal
- ideation without a specific plan, or a suicide attempt or a specific plan for
- committing suicide
-
- B. The symptoms do not meet criteria for a Mixed Episode.
-
- C. The symptoms cause clinically significant distress or impairment in social,
- occupational, or other important areas of functioning.
-
- D. The symptoms are not due to the direct physiological effects of a substance
- (e.g., a drug of abuse, a medication) or a general medical condition (e.g.,
- hypothyroidism).
-
- E. The symptoms are not better accounted for by bereavement, i.e., after the
- loss of a loved one, the symptoms persist for longer than 2 months or are
- characterized by marked functional impairment, morbid preoccupation with
- worthlessness, suicidal ideation, psychotic symptoms, or psychomotor
- retardation.
-
- ******************************************************************************
-
- Well, the APA gives us a good starting point, but it all sounds sort of
- clinical. Here's a more complete list of symptoms of depression that our
- readers and participants have identified:
-
- * Reduced interest in activities (like writing FAQs)
-
- * Indecisiveness (maybe)
-
- * Feeling sad, unhappy, or blue (pervasive attitude that
- life sucks)
-
- * Irritability, dammit.
-
- * Getting too much (hypersomnia) or too little (insomnia)
- sleep.
-
- * Loss of, um, what were we talking about? Oh yeah,
- concentration.
-
- * Increased or decreased appetite (my ex-mother-in-law's
- cooking notwithstanding)
-
- * Loss of self-esteem, such as my understanding that I suck.
-
- * Decreased sexual desire.
-
- * Problems with, whaddya call it? Oh yeah, memory.
-
- * Despair and hopelessness
-
- * Suicidal thoughts.
-
- * Reduced pleasurable feelings.
-
- * Guilt feelings, which are all my fault anyway.
-
- * Crying uncontrollably and/or for no apparent reason.
-
- * Feeling helpless, which I can't do anything about.
-
- * Restlessness, especially when I can't hold still.
-
- * Feeling disorganized (hell, look at my desk).
-
- * Difficulty doing things (again, like finishing this FAQ)
-
- * Lack of energy and feeling tired.
-
- * Self-critical thoughts
-
- * Moving and thinking slooooooowwwwwwwly.
-
- * Feeling that one is in a stupor, or that one's head is in
- a fog.
-
- * Speeeeeeeakiiinnnnng slooooooowwwwwwwly.
-
- * Emotional and/or physical pain.
-
- * Hypochondriacal worries; fears or illnesses which prove to
- be psychosomatic.
-
- * Feeling dead or detached.
-
- * Delusions of guilt or of financial poverty.
-
- * Hallucinating.
-
-
-
- -------------------
- 3.3 What is Mania?
- -------------------
-
-
- ******************************************************************************
-
- Criteria for Manic Episode (DSM-IV, p. 332)
-
- A. A distinct period of abnormally and persistently elevated, expansive, or
- irritable mood, lasting at least 1 week (or any duration if hospitalization is
- necessary).
-
- B. During the period of mood disturbance, three (or more) of the following
- symptoms have persisted (four if the mood is only irritable) and have been
- present to a significant degree:
-
- (1) inflated self-esteem or grandiosity
-
- (2) decreased need for sleep (e.g., feels rested after only 3 hours of sleep)
-
- (3) more talkative than usual or pressure to keep talking
-
- (4) flight of ideas or subjective experience that thoughts are racing
-
- (5) distractibility (i.e., attention too easily drawn to unimportant or
- irrelevant external stimuli)
-
- (6) increase in goal-directed activity (either socially, at work or school, or
- sexually) or psychomotor agitation
-
- (7) excessive involvement in pleasurable activities that have a high potential
- for painful consequences (e.g., engaging in unrestrained buying sprees, sexual
- indiscretions, or foolish business investments)
-
- C. The symptoms do not meet criteria for a Mixed Episode.
-
- D. The mood disturbance is sufficiently severe to cause marked impairment in
- occupational functioning or in usual social activities or relationships with
- others, or to necessitate hospitalization to prevent harm to self or others,
- or there are psychotic features.
-
- E. The symptoms are not due to the direct physiological effects of a substance
- (e.g., a drug of abuse, a medication, or other treatments) or a general
- medical condition (e.g., hyperthyroidism).
-
- Note: Manic-like episodes that are clearly caused by somatic antidepressant
- treatment (e.g., medication, electroconvulsive therapy, light therapy) should
- not count toward a diagnosis of Bipolar I Disorder.
-
- ******************************************************************************
-
- Again, the APA gives us a good starting point for studying mania, but the
- language is awfully clinical. Here's a plain-English version, with some
- extensions:
-
- * Decreased need for sleep.
-
- * Restlessness.
-
- * Feeling full of energy.
-
- * Distractibility (what was that?)
-
- * Increased talkativeness (or increased typeativeness)
-
- * Creative thinking.
-
- * Increase in activities.
-
- * Feelings of elation.
-
- * Laughing inappropriately
-
- * Inappropriate humor.
-
- * Speeded up thinking.
-
- * Rapid, pressured speech, that you can teach, eating a
- peach, while on a beach.
-
- * Impaired judgment
-
- * Increased religious thinking or beliefs.
-
- * Feelings of exhilaration.
-
- * Racing thoughts, which can't be taught, and can't be
- bought, although they ought, you might get caught.
-
- * Irritability (dammit, there it is again!)
-
- * Excitability.
-
- * Inappropriate behaviors.
-
- * Impulsive behaviors.
-
- * Increased sexuality (also known as "platoon-of-Marines-on-
- shore-leave syndrome")... or
-
- * "clang associations" (the association of words based on
- their sound, a possible reason so many poets are
- bipolar, also why we have pun fun)
-
- * _decreased_ interest in sex, or any other interpersonal
- relationships, due to obsessive interest in some other
- subject or activity
-
- * Inflated self-esteem (so prove I'm NOT the world's leading
- authority!)
-
- * Financial extravagance.
-
- * Grandiose thinking.
-
- * Heightened perceptions.
-
- * Bizarre hallucinations.
-
- * Disorientation.
-
- * Disjointed thinking.
-
- * Incoherent speech.
-
- * Paranoia, delusions of being persecuted.
-
- * Violent behavior, hostility
-
- * Severe insomnia
-
- * Profound weight loss
-
- * Exhaustion
-
-
-
- -----------------------
- 3.4 What is Hypomania?
- -----------------------
-
- Hypomania means, literally, "mild mania."
-
- It's sometimes difficult to draw a distinct line between "manic" and
- "hypomanic," as "marked impairment" is a necessarily subjective evaluation.
-
- Also, one of the reasons that bipolar disorder often has a delayed
- diagnosis may be that hypomanic episodes are often overlooked amid
- the "Sturm und Drang" of adolescense and early adulthood.
-
- The associated features of mania are present in Hypomanic Episodes, except that
- delusions are never present and all other symptoms are *generally* less severe
- than they would be in Manic Episodes.
-
-
- ******************************************************************************
-
- Criteria for Hypomanic Episode (DSM-IV, p. 338)
-
- A. A distinct period of persistently elevated, expansive, or irritable mood,
- lasting throughout at least 4 days, that is clearly different from the usual
- nondepressed mood.
-
- B. During the period of mood disturbance, three (or more) of the following
- symptoms have persisted (four if the mood is only irritable) and have been
- present to a significant degree:
-
- (1) inflated self-esteem or grandiosity
-
- (2) decreased need for sleep (e.g., feels rested after only 3 hours of sleep)
-
- (3) more talkative than usual or pressure to keep talking
-
- (4) flight of ideas or subjective experience that thoughts are racing
-
- (5) distractibility (i.e., attention too easily drawn to unimportant or
- irrelevant external stimuli)
-
- (6) increase in goal-directed activity (either socially, at work or school, or
- sexually) or psychomotor agitation
-
- (7) excessive involvement in pleasurable activities that have a high potential
- for painful consequences (e.g., engaging in unrestrained buying sprees, sexual
- indiscretions, or foolish business investments)
-
- C. The episode is associated with an unequivocal change in functioning that is
- uncharacteristic of the person when not symptomatic.
-
- D. The disturbance in mood and the change in functioning are observable by
- others.
-
- E. The episode is not severe enough to cause marked impairment in social or
- occupational functioning, or to necessitate hospitalization, and there are no
- psychotic features.
-
- F. The symptoms are not due to the direct physiological effects of a substance
- (e.g., a drug of abuse, a medication, or other treatment) or a general medical
- condition (e.g., hyperthyroidism).
-
- Note: Hypomanic-like episodes that are clearly caused by somatic
- antidepressant treatment (e.g., medication, electroconvulsive therapy, light
- therapy) should not count toward a diagnosis of Bipolar II Disorder.
-
- ******************************************************************************
-
-
- ------------------------------------------------------------
- 3.5 What is the difference between euphoria and dysphoria?
- ------------------------------------------------------------
-
- There are two basic types of mania (or hypomania): euphoric and dysphoric.
-
- A person can experience both types when they have bipolar disorder.
-
- In euphoria, a person is high, in love with the world, one with the world,
- feeling boundless energy, talking a mile a minute, mind is racing, deluded
- with grandiose thoughts, etc. This kind of mania is generally the kind
- described in the popular literature.
-
- Dysphoria is another type of mania. In dysphoria one is "high" but in a
- different sense: agitated, destructive, full of rage, talking a mile a minute,
- mind racing, deluded with grandiose thoughts, paranoid, full of anxiety,
- panic-stricken.
-
- In addition, dysphoria can also come into the depressive side. These are often
- referred to as "mixed episodes." Mixed episodes are quite dangerous; suicidal
- ideation often accompanies this state.
-
- What's the difference between agitated depression and dysphoric (hypo)mania?
-
- Dr. Ivan Goldberg (psydoc@netcom.com) explains: "While folks in an agitated
- depression show increased motor activity, they never show increased
- sociability, increased creative thinking, joking and punning that may be seen
- in someone experiencing a dysphoric (hypo)manic state."
-
-
- ---------------------------
- 3.6 What is a Mixed State?
- ---------------------------
-
-
- ******************************************************************************
-
- Criteria for Mixed Episode (DSM-IV, p. 335)
-
- A. The criteria are met both for a Manic Episode and for a Major Depressive
- Episode (except for duration) nearly every day during at least a 1-week
- period.
-
- B. The mood disturbance is sufficiently severe to cause marked impairment in
- occupational functioning or in usual social activities or relationships with
- others, or to necessitate hospitalization to prevent harm to self or others,
- or there are psychotic features.
-
- C. The symptoms are not due to the direct physiological effects of a substance
- (e.g., a drug of abuse, a medication, or other treatment) or a general medical
- condition (e.g., hyperthyroidism).
-
- ******************************************************************************
-
- Comment: This may be an instance in which the DSM-IV definition is a
- bit too narrow. Many readers and participants in ASDM and SSDM report
- experiencing mixed states with hypomanic, but not fully manic, features.
-
-
- ---------------------------
- 3.7 What is Rapid Cycling?
- ---------------------------
-
- The "rapid-cycling" form of Bipolar Disorder involves four or more complete
- mood cycles within a year's time, and some rapid-cyclers can complete a mood
- cycle in a matter of days--or, more rarely, in hours. Studies show that women
- are more likely than men to be diagnosed as rapid-cyclers.
-
-
- --------------------------------------------
- 3.8 What are delusions and hallucinations?
- --------------------------------------------
-
-
- -- What are delusions?
-
- Delusions are, in general, "false beliefs." The DSM-IV (p. 763) defines a
- delusion as:
-
- A false belief based on incorrect inference about external
- reality that is firmly sustained despite what almost
- everyone else believes and despite what constitutes
- incontrovertible and obvious proof or evidence to the
- contrary.
-
- People who are in a manic or depressed episode may have delusions. Some of
- these might include delusions of reference, where the individual feels like
- events, objects, or other persons have a particular and unusual significance.
- The individual may also have grandiose delusions or delusions of persecution
- (such as paranoia).
-
- It's important to note that delusions must be diagnosed in terms of
- cultural, social, and religious norms. A belief that one is in direct
- communication with God, for example, might be either a delusion or an
- expression of certain kinds of religious faith. :-)
-
-
- -- Can people with bipolar disorder have hallucinations?
-
- Most certainly. The DSM-IV (p. 766) defines a hallucination as:
-
- A sensory perception that has the compelling sense of
- reality of a true perception but that occurs without
- external stimulation of the relevant sensory organ.
- Hallucinations should be distinguished from illusions, in
- which an actual external stimulus is misperceived or
- misinterpreted.
-
- Some people know that they are having hallucinations, and others do not. Most
- people who have bipolar disorder realize that the hallucinations are not actual
- perceptions of reality. However, this realization does not keep them from
- occurring.
-
-
- -- What kind of hallucinations are there?
-
- Hallucinations may occur in any of the senses: auditory (for example, hearing
- voices or music), gustatory (for example, unpleasant tastes), olfactory (for
- example, unpleasant smells), somatic (for example, a feeling of "electricity"),
- tactile (for example, a sensation of being touched, or "skin crawling"
- sensations), visual (for example, flashes of light, colors, images on the
- periphery).
-
-
- ----------------------------------------------------
- 3.9 How do you tell unipolar depression and bipolar
- disorder apart?
- ----------------------------------------------------
-
- If the person in question is known to have had even a single Manic or Hypomanic
- Episode, then there is virtually no question; the diagnosis is a form of bipolar
- disorder (or, in the case of hypomania, possibly cyclothymia.)
-
- If the person in question is currently depressed, and his or her history is not
- known, or is incomplete, the following guidelines by Dr. Ivan Goldberg may prove
- to be useful:
-
- The things that make me suspect bipolarity in a patient
- diagnosed as unipolar are:
-
- - oversleeping when depressed
-
- - overeating when depressed
-
- - a history of bipolarity in the family
-
- - a patient who when depressed can still joke and laugh
-
- - anyone with a history of frequent depressive episodes
- (rapidly cycling unipolar disorder)
-
- - success as a salesperson, politician, or actor (in school
- or real world)
-
- - extreme rejection sensitivity
-
- - a history of having ever been diagnosed as bipolar or given
- lithium (except to potentiate antidepressants)
-
- Of course, a unipolar patient can still sleep too much, unipolar depression or
- bipolar disorder can surface earlier or later in life, and so on. These are
- guidelines, not hard-and-fast rules.
-
-
- CONTINUED IN PART 2.
-