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Elizabeth Watterson

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Title: Elizabeth Watterson


1
Bipolar I Disorder
  • Elizabeth Watterson
  • Honors Intro to Psychology
  • Final Project

2
Brief Definition
  • Sometimes considered the same as manic depression
  • Bipolar means that your moods swing back and
    forth between 2 opposite emotional states
  • - you experience periods of major depression in
    which you feel sad, lonely, weak, and helpless
  • - other times you may have manic periods in
    which you feel incredibly energetic and confident
    and experience extreme sensations of anger,
    irritation or happiness

3
Example
  • - Mood goes from low and despairing (depressed
    phase) to elated and hypersensitive (manic phase)
    and then back to low and despairing.
  • - Phases are radically different and often
    interspersed with seemingly normal periods,
    making bipolar disorder difficult to diagnose

4
Other Facts
  • Frequently when Bipolar Disorder first appears,
    both the manic and depressive phases might be
    somewhat mild
  • Big clue of Bipolar Depression You start
    behaving hyperactively or as if you have too much
    energy
  • According to statistics, 2 out of 3 times doctors
    fail to initially recognize symptoms of Bipolar
    Disorder
  • When manic depressives are in a milder manic
    phase- full of happiness, energy, and confidence-
    they and those around them never stop to think
    that anything is wrong
  • According to the DSM-IV, 60 to 70 of Manic
    Episodes occur immediately before or after a
    Major Depressive episode
  • Studies on the course of Bipolar Disorder prior
    to lithium treatment suggest that, on average, 4
    episodes occur in 10 years
  • A small percentage of people with bipolar
    disorder undergo as many as 4 or more mood
    episodes in a year- called rapid cycling
  • The interval between episodes tends to decrease
    as the individual ages

5
Depression
  • Depression is a disease that can get worse if
    left untreated by a professional
  • It affects your emotional state, leaving you
    exhausted or panicky, teary or desperate
  • Also affects your physical well-being, leaving
    you tired, with headaches, stomachaches, shaking
    and/or fidgeting

6
Depression Statistics
  • According to the American Psychiatric
    Association, one out of every five Americans will
    experience depression during his or her lifetime
  • According to the National Institute of Mental
    Health, of the 18 million Americans who are
    depressed, up to an estimated 2 million are
    teenagers

7
Mania
  • Mania is a state of high, unnatural excitement
  • In a manic phase, you tend to become hyperactive,
    overflowing with nonstop energy- so much energy
    which can leave you feeling worried or anxious
  • It can lead to panic attacks, during which you
    become immobilized because you fear anything and
    everything
  • Sometimes an episode can make you obsessive

8
Manic Depression
  • The cycles of mania and depression are
    unpredictable and can last for very different
    lengths of time
  • You can experience mania and depression at the
    same time
  • Most people with bipolar depression have extreme
    cycles only once every few years
  • Some manic depressives may go for weeks, months,
    even years without experiencing any extreme ups
    and downs
  • -instead they have normal moods like everyone
    else, this is called euthymia

9
Who Gets Bipolar Disorder?
  • It is often a hereditary disease
  • It more frequently appears in young adults and
    continues throughout life
  • A persons race and national origin have nothing
    to do with the occurrence of Bipolar Disorder
  • It is equally common in men and women
  • The first episode in males is likely to be a
    Manic episode, in females it is likely to be a
    Major Depressive episode
  • It is a recurrent disorder- more than 90 of
    individuals who have a single Manic episode go on
    to have future episodes

10
What causes Bipolar Disorder?
  • Biochemical Factors
  • Genetic Factors
  • Environmental Factors
  • Psychological Factors

11
Biochemical Factors
  • Mania- too many neurotransmitters being produced
    in the brain
  • Depression- too few neurotransmitters being
    produced
  • Such excesses or deficiencies upset the
    communication between your brain and your body
  • Often, once an imbalance is detected, doctors are
    able to readjust levels with the use of medicine

12
Genetic Factors
  • Inherited genes can make you more susceptible to
    manic depression
  • According to the DSM-IV, first-degree biological
    relatives of individuals with Bipolar Depression
    have elevated rates of Bipolar Disorder (4- 24)
  • -this is proven through twin and adoption studies

13
Environmental Factors
  • There are some aspects of your environment that
    you have no control over, therefore it is easy to
    feel overwhelmed and anxious
  • When under pressure, your body produces increased
    amounts of certain hormones- when you are anxious
    or afraid, you will have excess amounts of a
    stress hormone called Cortisol
  • If these high levels stay in your body for a long
    time, they can have an effect on both your brain
    and your nerve cells
  • -these changes can lead to serious depression

14
Psychological Factors
  • Your attitude can affect the way that a
    depressive illness affects you
  • Example If you tend to look at things
    negatively, if you lack self-confidence, and if
    you worry too much and find it difficult to talk
    about problems, you will be less able to deal
    with the mood swings you are experiencing,
    therefore you also have a stronger chance of
    becoming seriously depressed

15
Effects of Bipolar Disorder
  • It can cause you to experience certain sensations
    and to behave or act in certain ways
  • Some of the sensations and reactions are common
    to all kinds of depressive disorders, but others
    are specific to manic depression
  • It affects your creativity
  • It can lead to drug and alcohol abuse
  • It can also lead to suicide

16
Creativity
  • During manic episodes, people tend to have a high
    creative output
  • Example Vincent Van Gogh was a manic depressive
    who experienced severe mood swings. He even
    sliced off his ear during a fit of despair
  • Other famous manic depressives Mark Twain,
    Virginia Woolf, Lord Byron, Edgar Allan Poe,
    Michelangelo, Tennessee Williams, and Robert
    Schumann

17
Drug and Alcohol Abuse
  • According to the National Institute of Mental
    Health, 60 of people with Bipolar Disorder are
    also diagnosed with drug or alcohol abuse
  • Used to dull the extreme moods experienced during
    both manic and depressive phases
  • It temporarily masks the symptoms, but over time
    it makes the symptoms worse
  • Drugs and alcohol can act on the brains
    neurotransmitters in a way that over stimulates
    the nerve cell pathways that govern emotions
  • This can upset your natural mood-balancing
    systems, causing you to experience even more
    severe mood swings

18
Suicide
  • People who suffer from bipolar disorder are 30
    times more likely to commit suicide than those
    without a mood disorder
  • When coupled with substance abuse and aggressive
    behavior, the risks for suicide grow even higher
  • Between 20 to 50 of manic depressives attempt
    suicide at least once

19
Treatment
  • According to the National Institute of Mental
    Health, less than 30 of people suffering from
    depression seek treatment
  • Manic depression is a chronic illness for which
    there is no cure
  • The most effective treatment is a combination of
    carefully controlled and continued medication
    along with therapy and good lifestyle habits

20
Why?
  • During a depressed episode, you will likely feel
    so tired and hopeless that getting help will seem
    impossible
  • During a manic episode, you will feel extreme
    happiness, self-confidence, and invincibility
    that will persuade you that you have never felt
    better
  • Between both mood extremes, you will likely have
    moments when you feel normal

21
Medication
  • Traditional medication used for Bipolar Disorder
    is a natural substance called Lithium
  • In 1995, the FDA approved Depakote
  • One of the most successful medications that has
    not been approved by the FDA is Tegretol
  • Zoloft, Paxil, or Prozall (all antidepressants)
    can also be given with the mood stabilizers, but
    using antidepressants without the mood
    stabilizing drugs can cause a manic phase very
    quickly

22
Medication Continued
  • Treating Manic Depression is complex because what
    works for one person might not work for someone
    else
  • Often, people in a manic phase will feel so good
    that they think they dont need any medicine, or
    their heads will be so filled with thoughts that
    they can forget to take their medicine

23
Other important treatments
  • It is essential to see a professional who is an
    expert on what you are going through
  • It is also important to keep a healthy body by
    eating balanced, nutritious meals, exercising,
    dealing with stress, relaxing, getting plenty of
    sleep, and sharing your feelings.

24
Works Cited
  • American Psychiatric Association Diagnostic and
    Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, Fourth
    Edition. Washington, DC, American Psychiatric
    Association, 1994.
  • Harmon, Dan. The Tortured Mind The Many Faces
    of Manic Depression. The Encyclopedia of
    Psychological Disorders. USA Chelsea House
    Publishers, 1998.
  • Johnson, Catherine, and Ratey, John J. Shadow
    Syndromes. New York Pantheon Books, 1997.
  • Sommers, Michael A. Bipolar Disorder and Manic
    Depressive Illness. Everything You Need to Know
    About. New York The Rosen Publishing Group, Inc,
    2000. 64.
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