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What Do We Know About Bipolar Disorder  Essay

¶ … Bipolar Disorder English Literature

Bipolar disorder, as much as thirty years ago, was a big American secret. Bipolar disorder was not as common knowledge as it is today. During the latter 20th century and 21st century a lot of light has been shed on the subject of bipolar disorder: the diagnoses, the treatments, the signs, and the ways to live with the disorder, both for the sufferer as well as the people close to the sufferer in his or her life. The paper will briefly outline key terms and conditions of bipolar disorder. The paper will additionally offer insight into the lives of people living with bipolar disorder providing commentary on the adjustments in life one must make to move forward, as well as commentary on some of the more popular treatments to assist with the symptoms of the disorder.

The causes of bipolar disorder are unknown to medical professionals to this very day. A sign that people should be on the lookout for the disorder is if another person in their family has the disorder. The relative need not be in the immediate family in order for the traits to be shared. Bipolar disorders, like many medical conditions, first show signs of onset during puberty. Doctors believe that bipolar shows the first signs during ages 15 -- 25. Because the signs start showing during puberty, it might take a little longer for parents...

(NAMI, 2008) In fact, many of the signs of bipolar disorder may be what people think normal teenagers go through, but the major difference between adolescents with normal psychosocial and emotional development and a person who is developing bipolar disorder, is that all of the traits of a normal teen show up in a bipolar teen in the extreme. Some signs of the disorder include: reckless behavior, lack of impulse control, hyperactivity, poor judgment, irregular sleeping patterns, excess involvement in activities (amount of activities and degree of involvement), false and elevated sense of self. (NIMH, 2009)
Bipolar disorder is primarily characterized by the extreme mood swings of the sufferer. A bipolar person will have episodes of mania, deep depression, and euphoria, not all at once, not necessarily in that order, but there will be a pattern. (NAMI, 2008) Bipolar people experience very high emotional highs -- so high that it is eerie, strange, or unwarranted based on the situation. They also experience very low lows and this is when bipolar people need extra support. The highs can be dangerous too -- when a person feels arrogant and invincible while that person also has poor impulse control, reckless behavior, and makes bad…

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References:

National Alliance on Mental Illness. (2008) Understanding Bipolar Disorder and Recovery. NAMI: Arlington, VA.

National Institute of Mental Health. (2009) Bipolar Disorder. U.S. Department of Health and Human Services: Bethesda, MD.
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