Demoz Articles
BookMark this Page    Tell Your Friend    Contact Us
Categories
 Arts & Entertainment

 Business

 Communications

 Computers

 Disease & Illness

 Fashion

 Finance

 Food & Beverage

 Health & Fitness

 Home & Family

 Internet Business

 Politics

 Product Reviews

 Recreation & Sports

 Reference & Education

 Self Improvement

 Society

 Travel & Leisure

 Vehicles

 Writing & Speaking

Useful Links
  Free Visa Guide

  Study Abroad

  UK Immigration

  Canada Immigration

  Australia Immigration

  Work Permits

  Arabic Girls

  Night Life of Dubai

  Jobs in Dubai

  Jobs in UK

  Search Universities

  Girls Fashion

  Bollywood Models

  UK Poetry and Jokes

  UK Hot Girls

Home / Disease And Illness / Understanding Bipolar Disorder

Understanding Bipolar Disorder

Resource for the latest of Understanding Bipolar Disorder. It contains latest useful information of Understanding Bipolar Disorder along with detail of Understanding Bipolar Disorder, also get the latest articles of Understanding Bipolar Disorder

Understanding Bipolar Disorder

  Viewed : 42Mail to a FriendRating :    Rate it

You're happy! You've never been happier! You feel full of life! You're so up, you haven't even been able to sleep for two days! You're on a natural high! And then the crash happens. And you never know why.

People with bipolar disorder live in a world of extremes. If you know someone with bipolar disorder, it might seem like they have multiple personalities. Co-workers, family members, or significant others may feel dizzy trying to keep up. What did you say now? She's so angry that she won't even talk to you! Wait, now she's back; she's crying and depressed and needs you for emotional support. You come back to check the next day, only to find her giddy with joy; she's burned through two credit cards buying home decorating supplies and she is now up at 2 AM wallpapering her bedroom. You keep waiting for it to make sense, but the mysteries only get deeper. Where's the happy medium?

And that's just the problem: there is none. In earlier times we might have misdiagnosed a bipolar sufferer as schizophrenic, just plain depressed, paranoid, delusional, or even drug-addicted. It has only been in recent decades that we have gotten to understand this exotic disease. It is no accident that bipolar disorder can be misdiagnosed as other diseases, because at times its symptoms are indistinguishable from many other disorders. Bipolars also show a marked tendency to abuse drugs, perhaps in an attempt to stabilize themselves or to try to lengthen their manic phases.

Bipolars often resist treatment, because they feel so good in their manic phase. In fact, their life is much sadder than they themselves may realize. Bipolars sink into a bottomless depression and may consider and act on suicidal impulses or deliberately harm themselves through cutting the skin. Bipolars wreck their lives, both in desperation during low times and in over-confidence during high times. In addition, a sufferer in manic phase may even become irritable or
fly into a rage; the mind's way of showing that even too much of an up feeling is... too much!

The good news about bipolar disorder is that it is especially responsive to medication. Unlike many psychological disorders for which treatments for only some of the symptoms exist, bipolar disorder virtually vanishes under a regular dosage of the proper medication. The toughest part is in keeping the patient treated. Those afflicted are likely to put any rationalization to their behavior, and even after treatment may stop taking their medication during times of stress, simply because they miss the high of the manic phase.

Famous bipolar cases, some diagnosed only retroactively, include Lord Byron, Kurt Cobain, Patty Duke, Carrie Fischer, F. Scott Fitzgerald (but he had everything!), Ernest Hemingway, Marilyn Monroe, Ozzy Osborne, Axl Rose, and Vincent van Gogh.

Article Directory: http://www.articledashboard.com

Mark Osbourne is a researcher and writer on bipolar disorder & has a website at Bipolar Disorder and Bipolar Relief which provides advice and information.

Tell Your Friend :


  Resource for Understanding Bipolar Disorder
© 2006-2008 DmozArticles : Latest collection of articles of all categories. All material on this site is copyrighted by its respective owner. If you see your copyright violated here, please Contact us Free Articles