Saturday, December 27, 2014

The Medicine Woes of Bipolar Disorder

I’m sorry I haven’t written for a while. I have been living in depressed-land. Don’t worry, I’m doing something about it. My p doc and I are trying to find me the right medicine combination which has been a “fun” adventure. This leads me to today’s post: the medicine woes of bipolar disorder.

One of the biggest things that people with bipolar disorder struggle with is noncompliance with their treatment program—or, in other words, people with bipolar disorder often have a problem with taking their medicine. This is a big deal considering 25% of people with untreated bipolar disorder will commit suicide. Yes, you read that correct. 1 out of every 4 people with the disorder who doesn’t get treated will die and yet a lot of people with the disorder are CHOOSING to not be treated. The idea that someone could know the risks yet choose to live untreated used to baffle me. Right now, I think I understand and so I will elaborate. I think the best way to do so is to tell my story.

When I was diagnosed with bipolar disorder, I was going through incredibly rapid mood swings. I could feel as high as a kite one minute and then ruminating on how I would kill myself the next. Obviously this is a bad thing so my doctor put me on the fastest acting thing he had, an anti-psychotic, Geodon. That drug had serious side-effects. For the first two days I was on it, I slept more than I was awake. I got tremors in my hands, especially when I was tired. I couldn’t think straight. But I was so grateful to not be cycling like that anymore I didn’t care about the side effects. I just was glad to have control over my emotions again. Because of Geodon’s severe side effects, my doctor only left me on Geodon as long as it took to transfer me to Lamictal. Lamictal is one of the top choices for bipolar disorder because it doesn’t have as many side effects, but you have to go onto it slowly or you could develop a rash that might possibly turn deadly. So I stayed on Geodon just long enough to get me onto a therapeutic dose of Lamictal. It’s a good thing too. Geodon seriously messed with me. It took quite a while for the tremors to go away, even after I stopped taking the drug. I’m glad I got off it when I did.

I thought I hit the jackpot with Lamictal. Really, it was my best friend. For over a year I was relatively balanced and happy. Life was good. I even went back to school and got a 4.0 my first semester. That was the first 4.0 of my life. I had a couple of bipolar friends who were very jealous of me because finding the ideal medicine that fast is rare for people with bipolar disorder. I didn’t appreciate how good those times were. I don’t know if it’s because I started taking more stressful classes or if it’s just the nature of the disorder, but I started getting unbalanced again. Nothing major, just a little bit, so my doctor (new one—I moved) raised my dose. All hell broke loose. Keep in mind, I’d been on this med for over a year so I was incredibly surprised when I woke up one morning with my eyes wacked out. I had bouncing vision and double vision every morning for a few hours after I took the medicine. I’m no baby. I knew from previous experience that sometimes once the body gets used to a medicine, side effects die down, so I held out as long as I could on that dose, but the crazy eyes didn’t die down. If anything, it got worse. We dropped me back down to my old dose and my eyes stopped going crazy every morning, but they never were the same. Literally. I had them checked and my eyes were perfectly healthy, but my vision had decreased during that time period and sometimes in the mornings I would feel little tremors behind my eyes.

Since upping my dose wasn’t an option and outside my crazy eye event Lamictal is such a good medicine to be on, my doctor and I decided that we’d try adding another medicine to the Lamictal to see if that would help. We tried Seroquel. It made me sleepy at night, but that’s about it. It didn’t help balance my moods and sometimes I got a bit snacky. We took me off that. I think we tried something else too at this point, but I can’t remember. We decided that we’d wait until the summer before playing with medicines again because I had a very stressful semester and we didn’t want to make it worse.

Summer came and I realized that without the stress of school the Lamictal was almost adequate. Playing with meds would have to be done during the school year, whether I liked it or not, if I wanted to actually find the medicine that helped me when I really needed it. This last semester has been the “play with meds” game. It’s been a nightmare. I have an incomplete as a result and I’m still not on the right med combo. We took me off Lamictal. We tried Abilify and it stabilized me right into a mild depression, the one I haven’t gotten out of. I was sleepy a lot on Abilify and I couldn’t focus at all. I LOVE reading, but it took me over 2 weeks to finish a book. I didn’t do a lot of my homework during this time, hence the reason for the incomplete.

My current medicine is Depakote. Depakote added a new piece to the adventure in the form of bloodwork. I’ve had to go three times to get my medicine. The first time, the Depakote, even though I’m at a low dose, was above the therapeutic level. I had to go again—if it stayed there, new medicine. It was a fluke and went down, but the second time my liver enzymes were high. Again, I had to go get it checked. If they remained too high, new medicine. I got the phone call today saying that once again, it was a fluke. Liver enzymes are normal. (Side note, I have an amazing doctor. She called me on a Saturday morning to let me know I was okay even though she wasn’t in the office. How many doctors do that?). Since everything is normal, for now I’m staying on Depakote.

The issue is I’m still depressed. I’m stable. My moods aren’t fluctuating. I’m not suicidal. I’m just depressed. My doctor prescribed Buspar, an antidepressant, to take on top of the Depakote. I’ve only been taking a partial dose and at a partial dose, it doesn’t seem to be doing much. I took the full dose one time and it made me all shaky and faint to the point I couldn’t stand straight. Today my doctor told me to spread it throughout the day and see if that helps. Hopefully it works. If not, back to the drawing board.


I’m so tired of trying to find the right medicine. If I didn’t have a firm support network, one that checks in on me regularly, one full of people I love, it would be so easy to just say “Screw this!” Luckily I have people I love who support me. That and the fact I’m ridiculously logical keep me going back to the doctor over and over. I’m optimistic, at least once you take out the depressed part of me. We’ll find the right drug combo someday. There are just too many medicines out there I haven’t tried for me to give up. I don’t want to even risk being part of the 25% who doesn’t make it, but I understand their reasoning. Some don’t take it because they think they can do it on their own. Some don’t take medicines because they like the highs too much. Most don’t take it because honestly it’s just easier to give up than go back to the drawing board one more time and try another medicine that might make you feel like crap. 

Saturday, November 1, 2014

November Challenge

I’m part of a bipolar support group and for the month of November we were challenged to “choose 1 to 3 things that will make you happy, is good for your mind or health, that will make you feel better, that will assist you financially, or that will keep you occupied.” I decided to play. I have myself two goals. One is to blog. I’m blogging. Check. The other is to socialize more.

The thing is I’m a very social person, or at least I have been most of my life. Even on medicine and all balanced I’ve been fairly social. Lately, however, I’ve had to convince myself that being social is worth it. My lack of desire to socialize is pretty good evidence that I’m in a depression right now. If I weren’t depressed I’m pretty sure at the very least Halloween would have tempted me. It didn’t. I stayed home, lights out so trick-or-treaters wouldn’t knock, and watched a movie by myself. This isn’t a sob story. I actually enjoyed myself last night, but I’m not being social at all and it’s hurting me. Even if some nights (such as last night) are fine, this constant no social activity thing is starting to eat at me and a good chunk of me just doesn’t care. And then out of the blue I’ll burst into tears on my poor husband crying about how I have lots of friends but none of the “hang out with me” kind. This is true, but maybe, just maybe it’s because I don’t do anything to hang out with them either. Just an idea.

So my goal this month is to hang out with people. It can be my husband. It can be my sister in law. It can be kids from school. It can be good friends. It doesn’t matter. I just have to spend at least 45 minutes of work-free hanging out every week.  

I think this goal has a lot of potential to impact my moods and even my school performance. I can’t make the depression I’ve been experiencing just disappear but I can do little things that have a hope of making a difference. I’m not talking “yay my depression is gone!” difference. I’m talking “yay I have motivation to do one more thing today!” difference. That one more thing might just get me through another math assignment, or my English project, etc. Right now I’m behind in about half of my classes and lacking the motivation to catch up. I can use every extra minute of motivation I can get.

Hopefully I’m right and being social will help me do better emotionally and in school. There’s only one way to know and that’s to try it, so here I go!


Beans

Thursday, October 30, 2014

The First Post

Welcome to the first post of my blog, Bipolar Beans. This blog is an attempt to address the issues that a 20 something bipolar girl experiences on a normal basis. I’ve debated whether or not I should write this blog for a while. I have half started it more times than I can remember. This time people are expecting a post “forcing” me to finish this post and actually start the blog. I’m excited to do so but also nervous and even a bit frightened. Bipolar disorder is scary to talk about. The more I talk about it the more I realize the truth of that statement. There are simply too many stigmas for me to talk freely without expecting any repercussions. I’ve found, however, that the good that comes from talking about it outweighs the bad, so I will continue to talk about my disorder and this blog is just another way for me to do so.

Before I do anything else I need to make sure you know what bipolar disorder really is. Keep in mind this is the skeleton version. I’ll go more in depth about different pieces of it as time goes on.

Bipolar disorder is a mental illness where moods just aren’t stable. The name bipolar means two poles. We go between extreme highs and extreme lows. The extreme lows are depression. The extreme highs are mania, or hypomania (that depends on the type of bipolar disorder). Bipolar depression looks almost exactly like chronic or clinical depression. We feel sad for no reason. Or we feel bleh, like nothing matters anymore. There’s no cause, no good reason to feel that way. We’re just depressed.

On the other extreme is mania and hypomania. This is beyond happiness and ecstasy. It’s like having the energizer bunny running full time inside you. Your thoughts won’t quit. You have almost no need to sleep. Everything seems more intense, more real, more beautiful. In extreme cases the mania gets really bad and people start experiencing psychosis to varying degrees. My version is hypomania (below mania) and I can do almost anything. I’m on top of the world! It’s the best day of my life every day when I’m hypomanic.

In order to be bipolar a person has to experience rotating episodes of the depression and of the hypomania or mania. Everyone’s episode cycles are just a little bit different which is important to note before you read the blog. This blog is MY journey with bipolar disorder. You may know someone with bipolar disorder. You may even be someone with bipolar disorder. My journey and your journey may look similar, but don’t expect them to overlap 100% because they won’t.

Thank you for reading my first post. I hope you learned something or your interest was piqued. I’ll write again soon.


Beans