A Manic Depression Primer
Cycle of Moods
NIMH
Depression and Bipolar

HealthyPlace.com Radio
Bipolar Support Groups

Books on Bipolar
Conference Transcripts
Bipolar Videos
Diaries - Journals
Disorders Definitions
Mental Health News
Online Bipolar Tests
Psychiatric Medications
Resources
Site Map

Email
ICQ
Instant Messenger

Visit and Post

ADD/ADHD
Addictions
Depression
OCD
Parenting

send this page to a friend


Bipolar Disorder Often Missed

Diagnosis overlooking manic phase of illness can delay treatment, psychiatrists say

(February 5, 2006) -- Kent Mulkey got a divorce, moved to California and took antidepressants to deal with his depression. Still, he couldn't control his reckless behavior.

"When it all comes down to it, and the jig is up, I'll kill myself," is what he figured. "That was my default. I saw it as my way out."

Fortunately, a solution came 10 years into his mental illness, he said, when his doctor determined he wasn't suffering from depression alone but had a milder form of bipolar disorder, also known as manic-depressive illness.

Mulkey is among the 35 percent of people whose accurate mental health diagnosis is delayed for a decade, and among the 60 percent of adults with bipolar disorder who are misdiagnosed as just being depressed.

Teasing apart symptoms, finding the right medications and dosages to treat them, and getting the patient to comply with the regimen are the fundamental challenges of psychiatry, the medical specialty that focuses on mental illness.

No blood test or high-tech scanning device can prove the existence of a particular mental illness. Instead, doctors rely on a psychiatric diagnostic manual and their own expertise to assess a patient's symptoms, find a diagnosis and choose a treatment.

"That's the problem with psychiatry," said Dr. Charles Schaffer, a Sacramento psychiatrist specializing in bipolar disorder. "Our diagnoses are not as valid or reliable as in other specialties."

Mulkey, now 49, said he was diagnosed with depression in 1994 after deciding to leave a job as a mental health counselor at a psychiatric hospital to start a private practice. He was put on the antidepressant drug Paxil.

"What felt like a step off the curb to anyone else felt to me like stepping off the Grand Canyon," he said. "I was free-falling into severe depression."

Compounding the depression, he said, was restlessness and boredom. "I was acting out sexually and keeping it hidden. I was really spinning. The cycle for me was in order to combat depression, there was the thrill of acting out, which leads to more depression because of the guilt and shame."

Dr. Joseph Sison, a Sacramento psychiatrist who specializes in treatment of mentally ill children, said that in some patients antidepressants increase a patient's agitation, restlessness and explosiveness.

"If that's the case, you probably should relook at the diagnosis, because it may be bipolar disorder," he said.

Dr. Linda Schaffer, a psychiatrist who shares an office with her husband, Charles Schaffer, said she discovered that depressed patients who weren't getting better on antidepressants improved when the drug lithium -- for mood disorders -- was added to the mix.

Although the diagnosis of depression was accurate, she said, doctors were missing the other side of the illness -- the nervous energy, anxiety and irritability. "If you treat that side, they get better," she said.

advertisement

Patients, too, neglect to describe those other symptoms when they see their doctors, in part because the manic moods and behaviors can be a welcome respite from the depression.

The stigma of bipolar disease, often perceived as far more serious and chronic than depression, also prevents patients and their doctors from arriving at the appropriate diagnosis, Charles Schaffer said.

"You are more crazy (with bipolar)," he said. "It's more acceptable to be depressed."

Source: MIT Technology Review

Last updated: 2/06

Related Information:

back to top ~ bipolar news index ~ send page to a friend


HealthyPlace.com Bipolar Center Links
home ~ site map ~ types ~ causes ~ diagnosis ~ treatments
children ~ suicide ~ support ~ personal stories ~ news ~
articles



advertisement


HealthyPlace.com Homepage
Chat ~ Forums ~ Communities
HealthyPlace.com Films ~ HealthyPlace.com Radio ~ News
Site Map ~ Web Tour ~ Advertise ~ Email Us
send this page to a friend

© 2000-2008 HealthyPlace.com, Inc. All rights reserved.
Terms of Use Privacy Policy Disclaimer Advertising Policy