Bipolar Disorder

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    Bipolar Disorder

    Bipolar disorder, also called Manic Depression, is defined as a condition in which people go back and forth between periods of a very good or irritable mood and depression. It is a mental illness caused by a chemical imbalance in the brain and can be managed with regular, ongoing, counseling and medication. The “mood swings”, as they are often called, between regular happy moods and depressions can last for days, hours or can be very quick. Bipolar disorder affects both men and women. There is no

    Words: 830 - Pages: 4

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    Bipolar Disorder

    Bipolar Disorder Ashley Lannon Introduction to Psychology Professor Deborah Schlobach Bipolar disorder, also known as manic-depressive illness is not just mood swings it is a brain disorder that can cause uncommon shifts in a person’s mood, energy, and ability to function in everyday activities. Bipolar disorder is more than just usual mood swings that you, or I might have from time to time, they are much more than that. Before you can fully understand

    Words: 1440 - Pages: 6

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    Bipolar Disorder

    Bipolar Disorder Persuasive Writing March 10, 2013 Bipolar disorder affects approximately 2.2 million Americans (Stanford School of Medicine, 2011). It is referred to as manic-depressive disorder. Bipolar disorder “is associated with mood swings that range from the lows of depression to the highs of mania” (Mayo Clinic Staff, 2012). This disorder equally affects women and men. Typically this illness begins in early adulthood and will continue for the rest of the person’s life. My best

    Words: 705 - Pages: 3

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    Bipolar Disorder

    Communication Submitted To: Madam Aneesa Zafar Assignment: Writing a Term Paper Registration No: SP07-BBA-033 Submitted By: Sidrah Khan Class: BBA-8 Circadian Rhythms as a basis of mood disorder, in particular bipolar disorder. Introduction: The complex structure and the functions of the human body has been a subject of study by a lot of individuals since a very long time. The curiosity of the human being supporting it, further aids in discovering

    Words: 1992 - Pages: 8

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    Bipolar Disorder Report

    Bipolar Disorder Name: Marc Mah Siew Vern Subject: Psychology Title: Bipolar Disorder Student ID: AUSM 1107009 Lecturer: Miss Rachel Seak AUSM 1107009 Bipolar Disorder Report The topic that I have been research and studied together with my group members is bipolar disorder. My group members consist of 5 people including

    Words: 2724 - Pages: 11

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    Bipolar Disorder Analysis

    In the United States, Bipolar Disorder affects approximately 5.7 million Americans or about 2.6% of people older than 18 years of age. Mondimore (1999) states that, “Bipolar Disorder is a mood disorder, one of several emotional disorders whose main symptoms is an abnormality of mood” (p.5). The changes can be from high manias to low depression. Mood shifts caused by bipolar can occur as often as several times in a week to only once or twice a year. The symptoms of bipolar can be severe and lead

    Words: 1199 - Pages: 5

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    What Is Bipolar Disorder

    What Is Bipolar Disorder? COMM/156 5/25/2012 Mary Clark “What a creature of strange moods [Winston Churchill] is - always at the top of the wheel of confidence or at the bottom of an intense depression,” once said William Maxwell "Max" Aitken. Bipolar disorder is a chemical imbalance in the brain that has yet to be unraveled; it causes many mood swings that can happen at a moment’s notice without a word. With many mental illnesses in order to diagnose them it takes time and observation with

    Words: 1530 - Pages: 7

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    Treatment of Bipolar Disorder

    Treatment of Bipolar Disorder - 1 Running Head: TREATMENT OF A MOOD DISORDER Treatment of Bipolar Disorder Frances Watson Psychology 201, Summer 2009 Professor Kiely July 17, 2009 Paper submitted to Prof. Kiely for Psychology 201, 8/17/2010 Treatment of Bipolar Disorder - 2 Abstract This essay will be reviewing the ways in which persons with the mood disorder bipolar disorder are given treatment for their illness. The stages of treatment, components, and results of treating bipolar disorder

    Words: 1510 - Pages: 7

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    Bipolar Disorder an Overview

    Tatiana Terranova   11/26/15  p.1  Health  Bipolar Disorder    Bipolar disorder, formerly known as manic disorder affect more than 3 million people in  the us each year    It’s a   isorder associated with episodes of mood swings ranging from  . d depressive lows to manic highs    Bipolar disorder can't be cured, but treatment may help      . . However, it requires a medical diagnosis by a trusted medical professional    Also, bipolar can be  . chronic lasting years or a lifetime 

    Words: 532 - Pages: 3

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    Bipolar Disorder in Children

    Bipolar Disorder in Children The term “bipolar” came from putting together the Latin roots bi, meaning two and polus, which pertains to a geographical pole, like the North and South Pole. Thus, bipolar means two poles or two extremes in mood or behavior. A Greek physician named Arataeus of Cappadocia from the second century A.D. was the first person to recognize symptoms of bipolar disorder. Arataeus’s observations of patient’s mood swing symptoms are what are now known as bipolar disorder. He wrote

    Words: 2013 - Pages: 9

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