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What Is the Course of Bipolar Disorder?

Last Updated 08 Jul 2007, 01:10 +04:00

Mood Disorders »  Bipolar Disorder: Patient Information »  

Episodes of mania and depression typically recur across the life span. Between episodes, most people with bipolar disorder are free of symptoms, but as many as one-third of people have some residual symptoms. A small percentage of people experience chronic unremitting symptoms despite treatment.

The classic form of the illness, which involves recurrent episodes of mania and depression, is called bipolar I disorder.

Some people, however, never develop severe mania but instead experience milder episodes of hypomania that alternate with depression; this form of the illness is called bipolar II disorder. When four or more episodes of illness occur within a 12-month period, a person is said to have rapid-cycling bipolar disorder. Some people experience multiple episodes within a single week, or even within a single day. Rapid cycling tends to develop later in the course of illness and is more common among women than among men.

People with bipolar disorder can lead healthy and productive lives when the illness is effectively treated. Without treatment, however, the natural course of bipolar disorder tends to worsen. Over time a person may suffer more frequent (more rapid-cycling) and more severe manic and depressive episodes than those experienced when the illness first appeared. But in most cases, proper treatment can help reduce the frequency and severity of episodes and can help people with bipolar disorder maintain good quality of life.




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Mood Disorders
Bipolar Disorder: Patient Information

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Mood Episodes
Manic Episode Specific Culture, Age, and Gender Features
Depressive Disorders
Major Depressive Specific Culture, Age, and Gender Features
Bipolar Disorders
Bipolar Disorder Prognosis
Other Mood Disorders
Mood Disorder Due to a General Medical Condition Recording Procedures
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