Skip to main content
Diseases

Bipolar Disorder

bipolar disorder

Entity Type
Diseases
Relation Groups
4
Relation Preview
32

Basic Information

Grouped by core information, identifiers, and descriptions.

Current candidates are inferred from disease-target-ingredient-herb paths and do not represent a formal recommendation ranking.

Core Information

Disease Name
Bipolar Disorder
Standard Disease Name
bipolar disorder
MeSH Tree
No data
ICD-10
F31|F31.9

Identifiers

DO ID
No data
MeSH ID
D001714
OMIM ID
MTHU036661|611535
UMLS ID
C0005586
HPO ID
No data

Description and Extensions

Description
NCI2016_02D:A major affective disorder marked by severe mood swings (manic or major depressive episodes) and a tendency to remission and recurrence.(MeSH)|MSH2017_2016_08_12:A major affective disorder marked by severe mood swings (manic or major depressive episodes) and a tendency to remission and recurrence.|MEDLINEPLUS_20151021:<p>Bipolar disorder is a serious mental illness. People who have it go through unusual mood changes. They go from very happy, "up," and active to very sad and hopeless, "down," and inactive, and then back again. They often have normal moods in between. The up feeling is called mania. The down feeling is <a href='https://www.nlm.nih.gov/medlineplus/depression.html'>depression</a>.</p> <p>The causes of bipolar disorder aren't always clear. It runs in families. Abnormal brain structure and function may also play a role.</p> <p>Bipolar disorder often starts in a person's late teen or early adult years. But children and adults can have bipolar disorder too. The illness usually lasts a lifetime.</p> <p>If you think you may have it, tell your health care provider. A medical checkup can rule out other illnesses that might cause your mood changes.</p> <p>If not treated, bipolar disorder can lead to damaged relationships, poor job or school performance, and even <a href='https://www.nlm.nih.gov/medlineplus/suicide.html'>suicide</a>. However, there are effective treatments to control symptoms: medicine and talk therapy. A combination usually works best.</p> <p >NIH: National Institute of Mental Health</p>
Related

Direct relations and traceable candidates grouped by relation type.

Related Targets

target disease8 Targets