Moody kids -- normal or not?
For some children, bipolar disorder could be the culprit
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As a parent, do you chalk this up to normal prepubescent moodiness? If so, you may be right. Then again, warns Dr. Kelly Botteron, you could be in denial.
“Parents sometimes try to explain away a psychological problem,” notes Botteron, an associate professor of psychiatry at Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis, who specializes in juvenile mood disorders.
“They’ll say, oh, kids can be erratic and kids can be moody and difficult," she says. "But in fact they aren’t as moody and difficult and erratic as their reputation. Most studies show that they aren’t as unusual and strange as they sort of have this cultural myth as being.”
Indeed, at times most children can go from irritable, easily annoyed, angry moods to silly, goofy, giddy elation but, says Botteron, there’s an easy way to determine if you have a problem: persistent trouble-making.
“If you have a child who is moody to the point of causing problems in school, at home or with friends, that’s usually not a normal thing,” she says.
One possible explanation is drug use. Another is that the child is suffering from a serious psychological illness, and one that's woefully underdiagnosed: bipolar disorder.
Much more common than thought
Also called manic-depression, bipolar disorder is a mental illness that causes a person to cycle through abnormally high and low moods. It was once thought to be rare in children, so little attention was paid to the issue. But the latest research shows that not only can bipolar disorder begin very early in life -- as early as age 5, though it typically manifests in kids around the onset of puberty -- it’s much more common than ever imagined. In fact, according to the Juvenile Bipolar Research Foundation, the condition is now diagnosed in close to 1 million children and adolescents in the United States each year.
The most shocking revelation, however, is that because many healthcare professionals haven’t been trained in childhood bipolar, kids afflicted with this illness may be misdiagnosed and given medication that actually worsens their symptoms or doesn't help them at all.
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In addition, between 20 percent and 40 percent of kids diagnosed with depression ultimately turn out to have bipolar disorder, he says.
It’s a situation Dr. Demitri Papolos, an associate professor of psychiatry at Albert Einstein College of Medicine in New York City and director of research for the Juvenile Bipolar Research Foundation, says amounts to a national healthcare nightmare.
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