Scientists thus call this tendency a "genetic vulnerability" to inherit depression (Read 2007:1)
Biologically, bipolarity is not caused by brain damage although there is mounting evidence that the brains of bipolar patients look different from those without mood disorders. A 2000 study in the American Journal of Psychiatry that the brains of patients with bipolar disorder contain 30% more cells that send signals to other brain cells, suggesting that the extra signal-sending cells may lead to a kind of over-stimulation, causing the rapid shifts of extreme moods characteristic of the disease (Read 2007:1). However, whether the disease causes the different brain configuration or the extra cells causes the disorder still remains a mystery.
To add to the mystery of treating this illness, because bipolar disorder has two distinct mood components, that of mania, and that of depression, treating it with medication can be especially difficult. Patients with bipolar disorder usually must remain on some form of medical treatment for the duration of their lives, and often different treatment plans must be prescribed, and medications must be readjusted depending on whether a patient is in a depressive or manic phase. For example, for patients on lithium, other medications are frequently added to the patient's course of treatment to specifically address the effects of the mania or depression ("Bipolar disorder," 2007, NIH).
Anti-psychotic drugs are used to treat particularly resistant manic episodes, while antidepressants that raise serotonin levels are used to treat the depressive phase of the illness. Atypical antipsychotic medications are also sometimes prescribed to treat mania, and evidence suggests clozapine may be helpful as a mood stabilizer for people who do not respond to lithium or anticonvulsants, because they lower dopamine levels.
Lithium remains one of the most popular treatments for bipolar...
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