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Medical treatment of bipolar disorder

Pros and Cons of getting treatment

Almost all of us want to believe that our bipolar disorder is something we can beat on our own, without medicine and without a label. Get as much information as you can and make a choice about whether to take medicines. The choice may involve weighing up risks — and only you can choose among the risks. Sometimes you have to settle for the ‘least worst’ option, but always remember you don’t have to suffer intolerable pain or distress, unlike people a hundred, or even fifty years ago, when old drugs struggled to be effective.

If you do go off your medicine, don’t be made to feel ashamed you will have learned a great deal from your own experience and you’ll be in a better position to make your own decision about treatment.

Types of medical treatment for bipolar disorder

pills, pillsMedical treatment for bipolar disorder is typically offered as pharmaceutical (drug) treatment and as psychological counselling, principally cognitive-behavioural therapy.

But medical and psychological help are only part of the process of recovering a good quality of life with bipolar disorder / manic depression. The missing link is you and your fan club. See what you can do to manage bipolar disorder

Medication

Pharmaceutical treatment (medication) comes in three main groups:

Mood Stabilizers

Mood stabilizers work to flatten out the fluctuations of mood.

stabilisers
They include lithium carbonate and some of the anticonvulsant drugs, for example sodium valproate and carbamazepine.

Mood Lifters

This is the 'anti-depressant' group. They lift the wavy line graph upwards:

mood lifter

There are several classes of antidepressants, from the old monoamine oxidase inhibitors to tricyclics, tetracyclics, the 'serotonin' group or SSRIs and newer drugs that act on noradrenalin.

Each has a different side effect profile and so it's worthwhile keeping on asking your prescribing psychiatrist or doctor if you are having bothersome side effects.

Symptom Settlers

Drugs in this category include antipsychotics and benzodiazepines. They are used to quieten agitation and psychotic symptoms such as hallucinations. They all have a sedative effect.

Chlorpromazine (Largactil®, Thorazine®), thioridizine (Melleril®, Mellaril®), and haloperidol (Haldol®, Serenace®) are examples of antipsychotics that have been used traditionally. These are older drugs, widely criticized for their capacity to cause sedation (people describe this feeling as ‘trying to swim through peanut butter’), and that they have serious and potentially life-threatening effects.

In the last decade newer ‘atypical’ antipsychotics were developed for people with schizophrenia and some of these (for example, risperidone (Risperdal®) and olanzapine (Zyprexa®)) may be used for the treatment of severe acute bipolar disorder. These drugs appear to be more effective in controlling symptoms and are claimed to be ‘safer’, but they still carry serious risks. Weight gain is one of them. Ask your doctor to trial a different antipsychotic if this is a problem for you as you might be able to use a different atypical antipsychotic medicine without gaining weight.

Alternatives

Western psychiatry is increasingly being seen as offering only an incomplete range of approaches to the phenomena of mental illness.

People with bipolar disorder are increasingly taking the best of conventional psychiatry’s offerings and seeking complementary or alternative healers.

In our opinion here at BeatBipolar.com, few if any alternative healing modalities claim to be as effective in eliminating symptoms of bipolar / manic depression as western biological psychiatry.

However, we all need to maximise our well-being, and this always involves more than just taking medicine!

Some of the modalities that might be useful include:

  • meditation
  • yoga
  • reiki
  • aromatherapy
  • homeopathy
  • herbal remedies
  • traditional Chinese medicine
  • chiropractic

Somewhat more promising is the use of synthetic sunlight for manic depression where there is a seasonal (i.e. light deficit) element. Go to Apollo Health to do a free assessment. (We are not affiliated with Apollo Health.)

 

best bipolar book

Buy "Bipolar & the Art of Roller-coaster Riding" and make informed treatment choices.

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About Us | Site Map | Privacy Policy | Contact Us | ©2005-2007 Two Trees Media

Last modified 27 January 2008

This page was written and published by Madeleine Kelly, a bipolar sufferer who underwent undergraduate medical training (University of Melbourne) and who is the author of Bipolar and the Art of Roller-coaster Riding.

Questions or problems regarding this web site should be directed to Publisher at TwoTreesMedia dot com.

This site and the book Bipolar and the Art of Roller-coaster Riding, the 2nd edition of Life on a Roller-coaster - living well with depression and manic depression contain the opinions and ideas of the author, Madeleine Kelly. The site and the book are intended to provide helpful and informative material on the subjects addressed. The book is sold with the understanding that the author is not engaged in rendering medical, health, or any other kind of professional services in the book. The reader should consult his or her medical, health, or other competent professional before adopting any of the suggestions in the book or this site or drawing inferences therefrom. The author and publisher disclaim all responsibility for any liability, loss, or risk, personal or otherwise, which is incurred as a consequence, directly or indirectly, of the use and application of any of the contents of this book or site.