Bipolar disorder, also formerly known as “manic depression,” can pose a serious threat to your emotional, psychological and physical health, and you may suffer from the disease without even knowing you have it due to the difficulty in recognizing and differentiating symptoms from naturally occurring moods and feelings and the length of symptoms. When bipolar disorder co-occurs with a substance use disorder, it can be even more difficult to differentiate symptoms and diagnose either condition, prolonging your suffering, diagnosis and treatment.
This serious disease is primarily characterized by the alternation between two intense and distinct moods — one of high-energy and euphoria and the other of lethargy and depression. Each of the individual episodes in a bipolar disorder may be long-lasting, adding to the difficulty of diagnosis. Alternately, you may experience periods where you have both manic and depressive symptoms simultaneously. The severity of symptoms often leads sufferers to self-medication, and you may find yourself turning to drugs or alcohol to manage symptoms, though drug and alcohol use adds new symptoms and can sometimes bring on otherwise dormant ones.
If you struggle with drugs and alcohol and suspect you have bipolar disorder — or if you have a previous diagnosis for bipolar disorder — a medically-supervised detox followed by addiction treatment and therapy will be crucial to addressing both your substance use and mental health issues and protecting your emotional, psychological and physical well-being.
Bipolar consists of four main types of episodes — mania, hypomania, depression and mixed episodes — each characterized by a different set of core symptoms.
A manic state is often easily recognizable, as it includes many observable and unmistakeable characteristics. These characteristics often include:
Hypomania includes many of the same symptoms as mania, but the symptoms will present themselves with lesser severity than a manic episode. While you will still experience many emotions at a high intensity, you will most likely find yourself able to perform most if not all of your normal responsibilities well. For this reason, even if you are experiencing a hypomanic episode, you may not realize you have a bipolar disorder.
An individualized, holistic approach to addiction recovery gives you your best chance of long-term sobriety. When you treat all of the individual aspects which contributed to your drug use — current stress, past trauma and social and personal factors — you can begin to address the underlying causes for your use and ultimately eliminate your need for drugs. After you have controlled, isolated and eliminated your addiction, you can begin to see what if any symptoms remain and diagnose mental health issues if present.
When you have a co-occurring disorder, such as bipolar disorder, it becomes even more critical to adequately address your addiction problem, because drug and alcohol use can both mask and heighten symptoms resulting from another disorder, and you will be unable to focus on your mental health while still suffering from symptoms of addiction. These complications make it impossible to treat any mental health issues while you are still using. Further, you can expect the same benefits from an individualized and holistic approach to treating a mental health disorder as you would from your addiction treatment.
Call Serenity Oaks Wellness Center today at 844-720-6847 to learn more about how a compassion-based approach to addiction treatment with a co-occurring disorder can help you overcome all of your struggles and begin living a whole and healthy life again.