Curious about Bipolar Disorder? See Your Doctor for Bipolar Tests for a Stronger Tomorrow

For someone who is unaware or undiagnosed, exhibiting the symptoms of bipolar disorder can be a frightening ordeal. If you or a loved one exhibit the signs of bipolar disorder, it’s best to make an appointment with their doctor so that they can undergo some tests for bipolar disorder. Symptoms of bipolar disorder range from one end of the mood spectrum to the other, from severe mania to severe depression. The exhibiting behaviors of mania include a decreased need for sleep, easily distracted, racing thoughts, rapidly talking and impulsivity. The behaviors exhibited by someone who is severely depressed include fatigue or loss of energy for the entire day, a feeling of overwhelming sadness and hopelessness, insomnia or excessive sleeping, inability to concentrate, recurrent thoughts of suicide and more.

Although it’s necessary to see a doctor for a true bipolar disorder diagnosis, there are some questions you can prepare yourself for when it comes to what to expect during a test for bipolar disorder. These include questions like have your thoughts raced so quickly through your head that your mind couldn’t slow down? Were you so easily distracted by what was going on around you that you had trouble concentrating on the task at hand? Have you ever felt much more self-confident than usual? Have you ever been so irritable that you started fights or arguments with people or shouted at them? Have you ever spent so much money that you got yourself (or your family) into trouble?

Bipolar tests do more than simply determine if you’ve ever been manic or depressed, they determine how long these episodes have lasted and the results of the episodes, whether or not any harmful or negative reaction occurred because of them. Sometimes, people may exhibit rapid cycling, which means that they rapidly go from manic to depressed right after the other several times a year. Still other times, individuals might have mixed features of both manic and depressive episodes as well as a state of catatonia, which is not reacting at all to the outside environment.

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