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An estimated ten percent of all Americans suffer from some form of depression during their lives. This figure varies but is pretty much the same worldwide. There are a few areas of the world that depression seems to have missed, but not many. Depression in general affects the way we behave from our sleeping patterns to the way we think and live life.
The
difference between depression and bipolar depression is in the severity and
frequency. Depression alone is often
brought about by life circumstances, while bipolar depression is chemically-
induced and the flip side of mania. Depression and mania come in cycles,
regardless of the circumstances in a person's life.
While
those suffering from clinical depression are at risk of using drugs or alcohol to
alleviate their symptoms, the risk is greater in those with bipolar
depression. A person who knows the highs
of mania may try to recreate the feeling when they are depressed or
"stable". Drugs often help create that high for a short time. This
puts the person at risk of adding drug addiction to the bipolar disorder.
Treatment
of the two types of depression also varies.
Those suffering from clinical depression are prescribed anti-depressants
alone. Those with bipolar depression,
however, are often given a mood stabilizer first, and an antidepressant as a
second choice if needed. Both
medications adjust the brain chemicals to alleviate the depression, but the
mood stabilizer also helps the person keep from going too far in the other
direction and becoming manic.
To
the person suffering from depression, it feels the same regardless of what causes
the mood. The important part of knowing the
difference plays is mainly in treatment options. A person suffering from bipolar depression is at
risk of becoming manic if only the depression is treated. This in itself creates additional problems.
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