No, this combo might cause a maniac episode on a bipolar disease.
This depends on that person's individual predispositions to mental illnesses. For someone with Bipolar Disorder, Schizophrenia, severe anxiety, and anger issues, they are more prone to experiencing more severe side effects from stimulants such as Adderall, Vyvanse, or Concerta. It is also very dose dependent.
There are no similarities between Concerta and Hydrocodone. Concerta, is used for ADHD, and is a stimulant. Hydrocodone is an opiate pain reliever, used for moderate to severe pain.
Absolutely not! That is a severe drug interaction.
The symptoms of bipolar depression will vary from person to person, but there are some specific types often found. The major types are Bipolar I and II, where between depressive periods I has severe mania while II has the less severe hypomania.
bipolar disorderBipolar Disorder
Bipolarity or bipolar
Bipolar disorder is generally accompanied by having severe mood swings. The two common moods exerted by someone with bipolar disorder as manic highs and crippling depression.
Bipolar disorder is a chemical imbalance in the brain. The symptoms of bipolar disorder are characterized by changes of mood ranging from severe depression to a manic uncontrollable high. Acute stress disorder is the result of a psychological shock that stems from severe trauma.
Did you mean Bipolar, this is a mental illness which is also known as a mood disorder. Its called bi which refers to TWO and polar referring polarity so two polarity, hence we have bipolar 1 n bipolar 2. A person wit bipolar 1 displays severe mood swings n mania with mild depression. A person with bipolar 2 displays severe depression with mild mania, there is also cyclothymic bipolar which is a border line bipolar that often goes undiagnosed
It can lead to it. One aspect of being bipolar is that the depression can be so severe, and you don't really understand why and everything seems hopeless.
Bipolar I Disorder (mot to be confused with Bipolar II). Highest suicide rate, mania, to include hallucinations and hearing voices, often violence. Bipolar I disorder also includes hypomania and severe depression. The term "Bipolar" at one time was known as Manic Depressive Illness. Currently, the name for the illness has come to include, erroneously, the Bipolar II. Bipolar II does not have the element of mania that Bipolar I does. Actually Bipolar II does have a manic element, but it is hypomanic, which is a lot less severe than the mania of Bipolar I. A lot of people, like me, start out as Bipolar II but become Bipolar I when they have their first full-blown manic attack (I prefer attack to episode because that's what it is--an attack on the mind).
Bipolar disorder