Manic depression, also known as bipolar disorder, is classified as a type of affective disorder (also called mood disorder) that goes beyond the day's ordinary ups and downs and is becoming a serious medical condition and important health concern in this country. Manic depression is characterized by periodic episodes of extreme elation, happiness, elevated mood or irritability (also called mania) countered by periodic, classic major depressive symptoms.
Overview of Depression
Depression is a mood disorder that involves a child's body, mood, and thoughts. It can affect and disrupt eating, sleeping, or thinking patterns, and is not the same as being unhappy or in a "blue" mood, nor is it a sign of personal weakness or a condition that can be willed or wished away. Children with a depressive illness cannot merely "pull themselves together" and get better. Treatment is often necessary and many times crucial to recovery.
Primary Types of Depression
- Major depression: Clinical depression
- Bipolar disorder: Manic depression
- Dysthymic disorder: (Dysthymia
Who Is Affected?
Manic depression affects more than 2.3 million American adults, 18 years of age and older, each year. And, 20-30% of adult bipolar patients report having their first manic episode before the age of 20. When symptoms are present before the age of 12, they are often confused with attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) — a syndrome that is usually characterized by serious and persistent difficulties resulting in inattentiveness or distractibility, impulsivity and hyperactivity.
Affecting males and females equally (although females are more likely to experience more depressive and less manic symptoms), manic depression often begins in adolescence or early adulthood. Manic depression is beginning to be better recognized in young children, although diagnosis may still be difficult.
Manic depression is likely to run in families and, in some cases, is believed to be hereditary. Family history of substance abuse also increases the risk of developing manic depression. Researchers are still seeking to identify a gene (or genes) that may be responsible for this disorder.