i was diagnosed with bipolar disorder in 1984, i was 14. i had been cutting myself since i was 8 yo. my journey over the next 10 years would involve 11 hospitalizations, 30+ medicines, as well as shock treatments. i am very happy to say that i am happily married with three beautiful children. i am looking to pen a book ok my experiences, and reach out to adolescents who need a common shoulder for support. any ideas on how to get this project off the groung, i'm all ears. cheers to all the survivors out there, and hang on, there is excellent help for those in need. jyl bookman ellis jylbeth@gmailcom
The Biology of Bipolar Disorder
What scientists have learned about the genetic and neurological roots of this complex illness.
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Bipolar disorder has come out of the shadows. Most people have heard of the disease, which used to be shrouded in stigma and mystery. But there's still a great deal unknown about how and why the disorder arises, what's happening in the brains of those afflicted, and how best to treat it. NEWSWEEK's Mary Carmichael asked the psychiatrists and psychologists who are conducting cutting-edge research to explain what they do know. (Read more about how bipolar disease is diagnosed in children here and find out how parents of bipolar children can get help here.)
What's going on in a bipolar child's brain?
Ellen Leibenluft, chief of the Section on Bipolar Spectrum Disorders, Emotion and Development Branch, Mood and Anxiety Disorders Program, National Institute of Mental Health, Washington, DC: "We've begun to learn something about the brain mechanisms. There is evidence that the amygdala is involved in a number of disorders in both children and adults, and bipolar disorder is one. The amygdala, which processes emotions—it looks around the environment and says, 'what's important to me, what do I like, what do I not like, what am I afraid of?'—is smaller in kids with bipolar disorder, and it's also somewhat hyperactive. We don't really know why the amygdala is smaller—we don't know for sure if that's a consequence of the disorder, or a cause of it. One hypothesis would be there are neurotransmitters that are excitotoxic; they fire too much and they can damage the tissue. There's also a regulatory loop between the amygdala and the prefrontal cortex. If the amygdala is overreacting, it could be because the prefrontal cortex isn't doing a good enough job of shutting it down. One of the ways that children both learn and are taught to regulate their emotions is by directing their attention away from upsetting things. We have a paper from 2007 in the American Journal of Psychiatry where we had children play a frustrating game, and what we found was that the bipolar children had difficulty with it when emotion was high. They could not redirect their attention. And attention is very much controlled by the prefrontal cortex, among other places."
Kiki Chang, associate professor of psychiatry and behavioral sciences at the Stanford University School of Medicine: "When these kids are young, they're having to recruit extra brain areas to deal with hyperactivity in the amygdala. They're trying to stamp it down. But over time, if they're not treated, they're not able to do that. As they become adults, believe the prefrontal areas of their brain become less and less functional. We have evidence of neuronal loss. Eventually the brakes wear out. We believe that psychotherapy and medication boost those things. But we don't have it really nailed down yet. ... There are [treatment] centers that are using brain-imaging modalities to aid in diagnosis and treatment. We're trying to spread the word that, 'hey, we're not ready for that yet. A picture of your brain is not going to tell us what we want to know.'"
Children with bipolar disease are often given powerful medications. How might psychoactive drugs affect a developing brain?
Leibenluft: "We know about the side effects that people experience, but we don't really have data as to what these drugs do to the brain. There is data in adults that lithium has growth-promoting effects on the brain, but we don't know what effects there are in children. There are a few studies here and there. You'll be seeing more and more of that in the future. Within the next couple of years, we won't have all the answers, but we will have progress. ... We're always looking to develop better treatments. Everybody worries about putting kids on medication. That's the rock and the hard place: The first thing is, does it work or not? If you're a parent, that's what you want to know. You also want to know about long-term effects on the brain, but you need to help your child today."
Robert Whitaker, author, 'Mad in America: Bad Science, Bad Medicine, and the Enduring Mistreatment of the Mentally Ill:' "The brain is this incredibly complex thing, and it responds to the environment. The frontal lobes are still developing when kids are 19 or 20. Nature has honed that development over millions of years, and you muck with that at some risk. When you put a kid on a psychotropic drug, the brain will try to compensate and you will end up with a changed brain. Let's start with the anti-psychotics—the standard ones block dopamine in the brain. There are three dopaminergic tracts, one that controls motor movement; one in the limbic system, related to emotions and paranoia; and one in the frontal lobes. The drugs perturb normal function in these areas, and the brain tries to compensate for that. Initially what will happen is the neurons release a bit of extra dopamine. That compensatory mechanism burns out after a while, but people on anti-psychotics also end up with a dramatic increase in dopamine receptors, and it may never come back to normal. Once you're in that unusual state, you're actually more vulnerable to psychosis than you were in the first place. So when a kid is coming off his meds, it's not the same as if he'd never been put on them. This is one of the real difficulties for parents. When they start down the path [of medicating], they're going to change their child."
Ross Baldessarini, professor of psychiatry, McLean Hospital, Boston: "Almost any psychotropic drug that's given for more than a few weeks leads to changes in brain function such that when you stop, the brain has to reset its thermostat. If you withdraw abruptly or rapidly there's a very high risk of recurrence of the illness that you're treating. Some years ago we treated a young man who had been a very successful student and was just starting in college and had a major psychotic breakdown. He got put on lithium and did very, very well on it, but against medical advice he took himself off it. Everything was fine for a few weeks, and then all hell broke loose and he developed a horrendous recurrence of psychotic mania. It was really like getting Humpty Dumpty back together."
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