- Cyclothymia (cyclothymic disorder) - Symptoms and causes
Cyclothymia causes emotional ups and downs, but they're not as extreme as those in bipolar I or II disorder With cyclothymia, you experience periods when your mood noticeably shifts up and down from your baseline
- Cyclothymia - Wikipedia
Cyclothymia is often not recognized by the affected individual or medical professionals due to its ostensibly mild symptoms In addition, it is difficult to identify and classify
- Cyclothymia (Cyclothymic Disorder): Symptoms Treatment
Cyclothymia (cyclothymic disorder) is a milder form of bipolar disorder involving frequent mood swings of hypomanic and mild depressive episodes It’s manageable with talk therapy and medication, but many people with cyclothymia don’t think they need treatment
- Cyclothymic Disorder - Psychology Today
Cyclothymic disorder, or cyclothymia, is a form of bipolar disorder characterized by distinct episodes of hypomanic symptoms (elevated mood and euphoria) and depressive symptoms over a period of
- Cyclothymia (Cyclothymic Disorder) Symptoms, Treatments, Causes . . . - WebMD
WebMD explains cyclothymia, also called cyclothymic disorder, and how it differs from bipolar disorder Plus, treatments, symptoms, and complications of living with cylothymia
- Cyclothymia - NHS
People can get cyclothymia at any age If you have cyclothymia, you'll have periods of feeling low followed by periods of feeling very happy and excited (called hypomania) when you do not need much sleep, are more sociable and impulsive and feel that you have a lot of energy
- Cyclothymic Disorder - StatPearls - NCBI Bookshelf
Cyclothymia is characterized by episodes consisting of hypomanic and depressive symptoms that do not meet the full criteria for bipolar or major depressive disorder Furthermore, its manifestations onset early in life, demonstrable via temperamental mood reactivity and dysregulation
- Cyclothymia: What Is It, How It Is Managed, and More | Osmosis
Cyclothymia is a chronic mood disorder that commonly presents in adolescence with large mood and energy swings, alternating periods of persistently elevated mood (hypomanic symptoms) and low mood (depressive symptoms) American Psychiatric Association
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