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Bipolar Disorder For Dummies. Joe KraynakЧитать онлайн книгу.

Bipolar Disorder For Dummies - Joe Kraynak


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WHO work together closely to coordinate their efforts. So in clinical practice, a doctor using one manual should arrive at a similar diagnosis as a doctor using the other.

      Exploring the Poles of Bipolar Disorder: Mania and Depression

      Bipolar diagnoses rely heavily on the type of mood episode(s) a person is experiencing or has experienced in the past, so to understand the different diagnoses, you need to know what constitutes a mood episode – specifically a manic, hypomanic, and major depressive episode. In the following sections, we present the DSM-5 diagnostic criteria for each mood episode type.

Manic episode

      A manic episode is a period of abnormally elevated energy and mood that interferes with a person’s ability to function as he normally does. Merely having some manic symptoms isn’t the same as experiencing a manic episode. The symptoms must meet the following four criteria.

Distinct period

      The episode must last for at least one week or require hospitalization, and it must be characterized by “abnormally and persistently elevated, expansive, or irritable mood and abnormally and persistently increased goal-directed activity or energy” that’s “present most of the day, nearly every day.”

Three or more manic symptoms

      Three of the following symptoms must also be present during the week of mania (four, if the mood is irritable rather than elevated or expansive). The symptoms must be present to a significant degree and represent a change from usual behavior.

      ✔ Markedly inflated self-esteem or grandiosity

      ✔ Decreased need for sleep (for example, feeling well rested after three hours or less of sleep)

      ✔ Excessive talking or the need to talk continuously (pressured speech)

      ✔ Flight of ideas – when thoughts flow rapidly and shift topics rapidly and indiscriminately – and/or the feeling that one’s thoughts are racing

      ✔ Inability to concentrate and being easily distracted by insignificant external stimuli

      ✔ Significant increase in goal-directed activity (socially, at work or school, or sexually) or significant physical movement or agitation (aimless activity)

      ✔ Excessive involvement in risky, potentially self-destructive activities, including sexual indiscretions, unrestrained shopping sprees, and optimistic investments in pyramid schemes

Functional impairment

      The mood episode must be severe enough to

      ✔ Impair the person’s ability to socialize or work, or

      ✔ Require hospitalization to prevent the person from harming herself or others, or

      ✔ Cause psychotic features (paranoia, hallucinations, or delusions) indicating that the person is out of touch with reality

      For more details, see the later section, “Presence or absence of psychosis.”

Not caused by something else

      For a manic episode to count toward bipolar diagnosis, the mania must satisfy the following conditions:

      ✔ The mania can’t be exclusively drug-induced or attributed to medical treatments. For example, if you’re taking an antidepressant, steroid, or cocaine at the time you experience manic symptoms, then the episode doesn’t count toward a diagnosis of bipolar disorder, unless symptoms persist after the effects of the substance have worn off.

      ✔ The mania isn’t attributable to another medical condition. Mania that is caused by a medical condition is identified as a separate form of bipolar disorder, as described in the later section, “Distinguishing Types of Bipolar Disorder.”

Hypomanic episode

      A hypomanic episode requires the same number and types of symptoms as a manic episode that we discuss in the preceding section. For instance, the symptoms must represent a distinct change from a person’s usual behavior patterns, and the changes must be observable by others. However, a hypomanic episode differs from a manic episode in the following ways:

      ✔ May be shorter in duration (just four consecutive days is enough to qualify as a hypomanic episode)

      ✔ Doesn’t cause severe functional impairment

      ✔ Doesn’t require hospitalization

      ✔ Doesn’t include psychosis

      

Hypomania doesn’t typically result in serious relationship problems or extremely risky behavior, but your hypomanic behavior may make people around you uncomfortable. On the other hand, hypomania can make you more engaging, so you may become the center of attention, at least until the mania intensifies, which may bring much unwanted attention.

Major depressive episode

      During a major depressive episode you may feel like you’re swimming in a sea of molasses. Everything is slow, dark, and heavy. To qualify as a major depressive episode, five or more of the following symptoms must be present for at least two weeks straight. These symptoms must be changes from usual behavior, and the episode must include at least one symptom of depressed mood or loss of interest or pleasure.

      ✔ Depressed mood most of the day nearly every day

      ✔ Markedly diminished interest nearly every day in activities previously considered pleasurable, which may include sex

      ✔ Notable increase or decrease in appetite nearly every day or a marked change in weight, up or down (5 percent or more) in a span of one month or less that isn’t due to planned dietary changes

      ✔ Sleeping too much or too little nearly every day

      ✔ Moving uncharacteristically slowly or having physical agitation observable by others, not just internal sensations

      ✔ Daily fatigue

      ✔ Feelings of worthlessness, excessive guilt, or inappropriate guilt nearly every day

      ✔ Uncharacteristic indecisiveness or diminished ability to think clearly or concentrate on a given task nearly every day, experienced internally and/or observed by others

      ✔ Recurrent thoughts of death or suicide (suicide ideation), a suicide attempt, or a plan to commit suicide

      These symptoms must cause significant problems in your day-to-day life and function to qualify as indicators of a major depressive episode. If they occur solely in response to use of a medication or substance, or another medical condition, then the episode has its own category, such as substance/medication-induced depressive disorder or depressive disorder due to another medical condition, and, therefore, doesn’t count toward a diagnosis of either unipolar or bipolar depression.

      

Of course, people who experience a significant loss or crisis in their lives may have many of these same symptoms. Doctors must rely on their clinical experience, observations, and what their patient tells them in order to determine whether the person is experiencing a major depressive episode or intense sadness that’s a normal part of the grieving process. In addition, cultural factors may play a role in how deeply a person feels and expresses emotion in response to a loss.

Not your average moodiness

Most people experience mood fluctuations to some acceptable degree, but bipolar mood episodes are amplified and extend far beyond the levels of discomfort – to the point of impairing a person’s ability to function and enjoy life. Episodes associated with bipolar disorder make a person think, feel, speak, and behave in ways that are extremely uncharacteristic of the individual. And they may drag on for weeks or even months. They strain relationships, disrupt lives, and often land people in the hospital or in legal trouble. And they’re not something a person can just snap out of. Figure 1-1 illustrates the difference between normal mood fluctuations and those related to bipolar disorder.

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