sábado, 10 de octubre de 2009

Children’s Mental Health Facts: Bipolar Disorder


Children’s Mental Health Facts: Bipolar Disorder
PDF version
http://download.ncadi.samhsa.gov/ken/pdf/SMA05-4058/SMA05-4058.pdf

Helping Children and Youth With Bipolar Disorder: Systems of Care
This fact sheet provides basic information on bipolar disorder in children and describes an approach to getting services and supports, called “systems of care,” that helps children, youth, and families thrive at home, in school, in the community, and throughout life.

What Is Bipolar Disorder?
Bipolar disorder is a brain disorder that causes persistent, overwhelming, and uncontrollable changes in moods, activities, thoughts, and behaviors. A child has a much greater chance of having bipolar disorder if there is a family history of the disorder or depression. This means that parents cannot choose whether or not their children will have bipolar disorder.

Although bipolar disorder affects at least 750,000 children in the United States 1 , it is often difficult to recognize and diagnose in children. If left untreated, the disorder puts a child at risk for school failure, drug abuse, and suicide. That is why it is important that you seek the advice of a qualified professional when trying to find out if your child has bipolar disorder.

Symptoms of bipolar disorder can be mistaken for other medical/mental health conditions, and children with bipolar disorder can have other mental health needs at the same time. Other disorders that can occur at the same time as bipolar disorder include, but are not limited to, attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder, conduct disorder, oppositional defiant disorder, anxiety disorders, autistic spectrum disorders, and drug abuse disorders. The roles that a family’s culture and language play in how causes and symptoms are perceived and then described to a mental health care provider are important, too. Misperceptions and misunderstandings can lead to delayed diagnoses, misdiagnoses, or no diagnoses—which are serious problems when a child needs help. That is why it is important that supports be in place to bridge differences in language and culture. Once bipolar disorder is properly diagnosed, treatment can begin to help children and adolescents with bipolar disorder live productive and fulfilling lives.

What Are the Signs of Bipolar Disorder?
Unlike some health problems where different people experience the same symptoms, children experience bipolar disorder differently. Often, children with the illness experience mood swings that alternate, or cycle, between periods of “highs” and “lows,” called “mania” and “depression,” with varying moods in between. These cycles can happen much more rapidly than in adults, sometimes occurring many times within a day. Mental health experts differ in their interpretation of what symptoms children experience. The following are commonly reported signs of bipolar disorder:

Excessively elevated moods alternating with periods of depressed or irritable moods;
Periods of high, goal-directed activity, and/or physical agitation;
Racing thoughts and speaking very fast;
Unusual/erratic sleep patterns and/or a decreased need for sleep;
Difficulty settling as babies;
Severe temper tantrums, sometimes called “rages”;
Excessive involvement in pleasurable activities, daredevil behavior, and/or grandiose, “super-confident” thinking and behaviors;
Impulsivity and/or distractibility;
Inappropriate sexual activity, even at very young ages;
Hallucinations and/or delusions;
Suicidal thoughts and/or talks of killing self; and
Inflexible, oppositional/defiant, and extremely irritable behavior.
What Happens After a Bipolar Disorder Diagnosis?
If a qualified mental health provider has diagnosed your child with bipolar disorder, the provider may suggest several different treatment options, including strategies for managing behaviors, medications, and/or talk therapy. Your child’s mental health care provider may also suggest enrolling in a system of care, if one is available.

abrir aquí para acceder al documento SAMHSA completo (extenso):
Children’s Mental Health Facts: Bipolar Disorder

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