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    About Bipolar Ii Disorder

    Bipolar disorder is also known as manic depressive disorder. It is a mental sickness that presents itself as mood swings or mood cycling. Many people do not realize that there are actually two types of bipolar disorder. Bipolar I disorder is typically defined as raging mood cycling with episodes of extreme mania and depression, as well as the occasional mixed episode. Bipolar I patients may also experience psychotic or hallucinating symptoms.

    Bipolar II disorder is typically defined as quick mood cycling with episodes of hypomania and depression. Bipolar II disorder does not eventuate with psychotic or hallucinating symptoms. Additionally, hypomania is defined as a milder form of mania, in which the patient has a period of hightened happiness or elation. Depression with bipolar II patients is often more severe than in patients with bipolar I disorder. Suicide, suicide threats, suicide attempts, and ideas of suicide are much more average in bipolar II patients than bipolar I patients.

    A diagnosis of bipolar II disorder is typically made when the patient has had one or more main depressive episodes, at least one hypomania episode, no manic episodes, and when no other reason for symptoms can be found.

    Symptoms of depression with bipolar II disorder include decreased energy, unexplained weight changes, feelings of despair, increased irritability, and uncontrollable crying. Symptoms of hypomania include sleeplessness, racing thoughts, distractibility, surplus energy, and rash judgements. These symptoms are similar to mania, but are less severe.

    Treatment of bipolar II disorder typically involves a combination of medication and therapy or counseling. Medications typically prescribed for treatment of bipolar II disorder include anti-depressants such as Celexa, as well as mood stabilizers such as Topomax. Mood stabilizers are vitally necessary in treatment of bipolar disorders, because antidepressants alone can cause the patient to penetrate into a manic or hypomania episode.

    Bipolar II disorder is actually often misdiagnosed as clinical depression. This is due to the fact that depression is the bulk often present, and hypomania episodes rarely come to light in therapy sessions due to their upbeat nature. It is typically via treatment by antidepressants that the correct diagnosis is made, because the patient will spin into a hypomania episode almost instantly if the diagnosis should be bipolar II disorder rather than clinical depression.

    Counseling or therapy treatment choices for bipolar II disorder may include traditional counseling methods, discussion of triggers and life style modifications that can lessen the severity of episodes, and cognitive behavioral therapy. Patients with a mild case of bipolar II disorder may benefit from counseling or therapy alone without medication. However, this is less average with bipolar II disorder than with bipolar I disorder, due to the nature of the severity of the depressive states.

    It is vitally necessary for people with symptoms of bipolar II disorder to seek the aid of mental health professionals as soon as symptoms become evident. Bipolar II disorder patients account for at least half of the suicides each year. To prevent suicidal behavior, it's important for bipolar II patients to be properly diagnosed at an early stage, so that ongoing treatment of the sickness can commence and be continued in order to avoid suicidal behavior.

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