
Comprehensive guide to BPAD: mania and depression phases, neurotransmitter roles, and stabilization. Learn about Types I & II and coping strategies
Bipolar Affective Disorder: A Deep Dive into the World of "Extremes"
Bipolar Affective Disorder (BPAD) is a complex endogenous condition within the group of mood disorders (ICD-10 code F3). It is not merely "mood swings" but a serious brain function impairment affecting energy, activity, and the ability to function.
1. The Biochemical Foundation: How the Brain Works Mental states in BPAD directly depend on the chemical transmission of impulses between neurons across a synaptic cleft 10–50 nm wide.
Key Neurotransmitters and Their Roles:
- Dopamine: Provides a sense of excitement and rewards survival-related activities. An "overdose" can lead to hallucinations, while a deficit leads to depression.
- Norepinephrine: Activates during stress ("fight or flight"), increasing aggression and reducing fear. High levels impair analytical skills, while low levels lead to apathy.
- Serotonin: Reduces sensitivity to negative emotions and aids concentration. In depression, its deficiency causes guilt and suicidal ideation.
2. The Spectrum of Affective States The disorder progresses in phases, usually separated by periods of full remission (intervals).
- Manic Episode (F30): Must last at least 1 week and include the "triad": hyperthymia (elevated mood), ideational activity (racing thoughts), and motor activity (agitation).
- Bipolar I: Requires at least one episode of full mania or manic psychosis.
- Bipolar II: Characterized by alternating depression and hypomania. Hypomania is often mistaken by the patient as a "perfect healthy state."
3. Lived Experience: The Psychic Rollercoaster Onset often occurs at ages 14–15 or during peaks at 20–29 and 50–59.
- Feelings in Hypomania: A "high" state where one can forgo sleep, travel constantly, and juggle dozens of projects.
- The Depression Trap: A sensation of "rusty brains," where even a simple phone call feels like agony.
- Social Consequences: Reckless loans, conflicts with management, and sudden resignations.
4. Treatment and Support Strategies BPAD therapy is always comprehensive and divided into three stages: acute (stabilizing the crisis), stabilizing, and maintenance (prevention).
Core Tools:
- Mood Stabilizers: Lithium, valproates, lamotrigine — these smooth out the amplitude of fluctuations.
- Antidepressants: Prescribed with caution (SSRIs are preferred), as they can trigger a manic switch.
- Psychotherapy: Vital for accepting the diagnosis, though it may be counterproductive during acute depression.
- Non-pharmacological Methods: Sleep deprivation, light therapy, and in severe cases, Electroconvulsive Therapy (ECT).
Bipolar Affective Disorder: A Deep Dive into the World of "Extremes"
Bipolar Affective Disorder (BPAD) is a complex endogenous condition characterized by alternating phases of mood and activity (ICD-10 code F31). It is far more than simple "mood swings"; it is a significant brain function impairment. Statistics show that 5.5% of the population suffers from severe forms, while up to 20% may experience milder variations.
1. The Biochemical Foundation: How the Brain Works
Mental states in BPAD depend directly on chemical impulse transmission between neurons across a synaptic cleft 10–50 nm wide.
Key Neurotransmitters:
- Dopamine: Drives the reward system and the "joy of movement." Excess leads to hallucinations and manic symptoms; deficiency leads to apathy.
- Norepinephrine: The "fight or flight" mediator. High levels increase aggression and reduce fear; low levels lead to boredom and exhaustion.
- Serotonin: Regulates sensitivity to negative emotions. Its deficiency is a primary cause of guilt and suicidal ideation.
2. The Spectrum of States and Types
The disorder progresses in phases, usually separated by periods of full remission (intervals).
- Bipolar I: Requires at least one episode of full mania or manic psychosis with impaired judgment.
- Bipolar II: Alternating deep depression and hypomania (a milder "high"). Hypomania is often mistaken for a highly productive "perfect healthy state."
- The Manic Triad: Elevated mood (hyperthymia), racing thoughts (flight of ideas), and increased motor activity.
3. Treatment and Support Strategies
Therapy is divided into three stages: acute (crisis management), stabilizing, and maintenance (prevention).
- Medication: Mood stabilizers (Lithium, Valproates, Lamotrigine) "smooth out" the oscillations. Antidepressants (SSRIs) are used cautiously to avoid triggering a switch to mania.
- Innovation: For treatment-resistant cases, Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation (TMS) or Vagus Nerve Stimulation (VNS) may be used.
- Psychotherapy: CBT and interpersonal therapy are vital for relapse prevention and diagnostic acceptance.

Elena's Story: Life on a Emotional Rollercoaster
- Beginnings and Adolescence: Elena remembers her childhood as perfectly happy, but everything changed during puberty due to a hormonal shift. At ages 12–14, she sank into a severe depression that lasted nearly four years. This period was marked by self-hatred, exhaustion, and suicidal thoughts; she devised her first suicide plan at just 9 years old.
- First Hypomania: The depression ended abruptly at age 16: Elena woke up with an irrepressible urge to run, laugh, and socialize. Her life became intensely active; she worked, traveled, slept only 6 hours a night, and felt a constant "vortex of thoughts." She once even participated in a grueling Arctic cycling expedition, outperforming men while carrying an 18-kilogram backpack.
- Social Consequences and Relapses: This state of hyperactivity often led to nervous breakdowns. During one such episode, she lost her job after an aggressive outburst toward her manager. At age 22, after moving to a new city, depression hit her again: work became a struggle, memory issues emerged, and her immune system weakened significantly.
- The Path to Diagnosis: Elena saw several therapists who tried to treat her for childhood trauma, missing the biological component. A private psychiatrist initially misdiagnosed her condition as suppressed emotions. It wasn't until later that an experienced doctor at a public clinic diagnosed her with Bipolar II Disorder at first sight.
- Treatment Struggles and Realizations: Finding the right medication was painful due to side effects like insomnia, vision problems, and rashes. Following her diagnosis, Elena made a common mistake: she took out a large loan and fled to a resort, trying to escape her depression through travel and alcohol.
- Current State and Lessons: Today, Elena understands that BPAD is a lifelong condition that requires a combination of medication and psychotherapy. She has learned to accept herself and shed the guilt associated with the illness. To stay stable, she uses yoga to "apply the brakes" during high phases and tries to maintain some activity during lows. Her ultimate lesson was realizing that external changes, such as moving or changing jobs, do not solve internal biological problems.

Your Path to Stability: Tools for Control and Support
Self-Monitoring Diary Template
A diary helps track the onset of a phase before it becomes unmanageable.
Date
Mood (-10 to +10)
Sleep (hrs)
Meds (dose)
Notes (triggers, events)
- Mood: 0 is your stable baseline, -10 is deep depression, +10 is euphoria or rage.
- Sleep: A sudden drop in the need for sleep is the primary early warning sign of mania.
Evening Reflection Questions:
- What was my thought speed today? Did I experience "racing thoughts"?
- Were there any external stressors or conflicts today?
- How did I react to feedback from others? Was there unusual irritability or anger?
- Did I feel an urge to spend money recklessly or take unnecessary risks?
Checklist of "Red Flags" for Loved Ones
If you notice these signs in a family member, it may signal the start of a manic episode:
- Reduced Need for Sleep: Feeling fully energized after only 2–3 hours of sleep.
- Pressured Speech: Talking very fast and being nearly impossible to interrupt.
- Risky Behavior: Reckless spending, taking out loans, or dangerous driving.
- Grandiosity: Unrealistic self-esteem or sudden "world-saving" projects.
- Irritability: Outbursts of anger when activity is restricted.
MriyaRun Project: Your Space for Stability
We believe that mindfulness and community support are keys to a fulfilling life. Use our online diary and resources on our website. Remember: the disorder is only a part of your life, not your entire identity. Take care of yourself and seek help in time.
- MriyaRun | Psych Journals, Workbooks & MAC Cards
- For Professionals: Tools & Resources
- Bipolar Disorder (BPAD): Symptoms, Types, and Treatment
