9 Warning Signs of Bipolar Disorder in Seniors

Bipolar Disorder
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4. Changes in eating habits

Changes in appetite frequently occur among individuals with Bipolar Disorder. They may either eat too little or too much. This can lead to various issues, including physical problems.

The fundamental rule is that food keeps us alive, but beyond that, it helps us gain energy and maintain good physical and mental health. However, if a person’s appetite is irregular or disappears entirely, it can be a sign that mania is setting in.

Why does this happen? Well, the brain of someone with Bipolar Disorder no longer understands the concept of regular eating; instead, it tends to reject any type of food that could potentially make them feel better.

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11 Responses

  1. please do not scare people and put fear and paranoia in their mind and eventually they get it. instead please give preventive measures. all the people are trained in 12 step you can prevent and also can be used as a treatment

    1. You can’t get something just by reading about it. You’re like the people that think that kids are going to become gay if they learn about homosexuality. You are the dangerous one, not information.

  2. Most symptoms addressed in this article are symptoms of attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD); impatience, intense emotions, lack of self-regulation, distractibility, inability to focus, disorganization, restlessness, difficulty sleeping and rapid speech. Often people with ADHD also experience depression and or anxiety. ADHD symptoms may change over time but often carry into adulthood and are not episodes. ADHD is a persistent illness. Someone with ADHD and depression could and often are misdiagnosed with bipolar disorder.

    With bipolar disorder (I or II) the depressive episodes are at least two weeks and can be alone or mixed with manic or hypomanic episodes, but it is not necessarily one or the other. To have one episode of depression or manic in a year or more can be considered bipolar disorder. A rapid cycler has 4 or more manic episodes in one year. The depression is episodes, not chronic.

  3. What happens when some of us feel like we should be tested for this but the professionals don’t believe us and come up with a different conclusion? Do things have to be extreme or dangerous before we are taken seriously? Just asking.

  4. I have never be diagnosed bipolar , just chronic depression and generalized anxiety.( but no one can say I am) .
    Reading your post , I think people shouldn’t be caged in one classification and we should analyze customs, culture and the way we were thought to live . Example,, in my house I hate to see the kitchen and the bathroom dirty so I try to educate people living with me how to maintain cleaning . Is that mania ? I do not think so. On the other hand there are things that I pass them on and I can stand. We tend to confuse ways of living and likes and dislikes with “ names” ( bipolar etc etc ). . If we say that some behaviors are a result of MANIA, BIPOLAR etc . Then we should say that all people are Bipolar. Thanks .

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