Syndicated from the Bipolar Blog
When you begin seeing a psychiatrist (or any physician who manages your bipolar medication), you may begin to feel like a guinea pig. Your doctor tries one medication after another to see which one works and which one doesn’t, which one produces the least annoying side effects, and which medications seem to get along best with one another when you’re taking multiple medications. You may begin to wonder whether you are the first person on the planet who’s been diagnosed with bipolar disorder. Shouldn’t the medical community know by now what works and what doesn’t?!
Due to the nature of bipolar disorder, prescribing the right medication or combination of medications is not so easy. Your doctor may begin by prescribing lithium—the gold standard for buffering mood episodes, particularly mania, but if lithium doesn’t work, stops working, or triggers side effects you can’t tolerate, then you doctor may need to try other options.
Once your doctor has diagnosed you as having bipolar disorder, he or she has three goals to achieve through medications:
Although the medication treatment goals seem straightforward enough, several factors make it difficult to prescribe the right medication or combination of medications. Researchers have not yet identified a single cause of bipolar disorder, and the fact that it affects both “poles” of a person’s mood continuum means that your doctor must try to treat the mania without worsening the depression and vice versa. Here are some of the major challenges in prescribing the right medications:
Unfortunately, prescribing the right medication or combination of medications often requires some trial and error, which understandably can make you feel like a guinea pig. By remaining in close contact with your doctor and describing the effects (and side effects) that the medication has on you, the two of you can team up to potentially improve the outcome and expedite your treatment.
Tip: Keep a medication journal to track the effects of different medications. Jot down the medication name and dose, when you take it, how you feel, and any negative side effects you notice. This can be a valuable tool in helping your doctor make the right medication adjustments. In addition, if you change doctors later, you can show your new doctor what you’ve tried, what’s worked, and what hasn’t.
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Pages tagged "guinea pig" (August 15, 2008)
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