Bipolar Medication: A Guide to Mood Stabilizers and Treatment

Medication is a cornerstone of bipolar disorder treatment. Understanding your options—mood stabilizers, antipsychotics, and other medications—helps you work effectively with your prescriber to find the right combination.

You’ve been diagnosed with bipolar disorder, and medication has been recommended. But the array of options seems overwhelming: mood stabilizers, antipsychotics, anticonvulsants—where do you even begin? Understanding bipolar medications helps you participate in treatment decisions and know what to expect.

Medication is essential for managing bipolar disorder. While therapy and lifestyle changes are important, they’re rarely sufficient alone. The right medication combination can dramatically reduce episodes, prevent hospitalization, and allow you to live a fuller life.

Why Medication Is Essential

The Role of Medication

Bipolar disorder involves biological changes in the brain. Medication addresses these changes:

  • Stabilizes mood fluctuations
  • Prevents manic and depressive episodes
  • Reduces severity when episodes occur
  • Protects against suicide
  • Allows functioning between episodes
  • May protect brain health over time

Without Medication

Untreated or undertreated bipolar disorder typically leads to:

  • More frequent episodes
  • Episodes that worsen over time
  • Relationship damage
  • Career problems
  • Financial consequences
  • Higher suicide risk
  • Potential brain changes

Medication Adherence

One of the biggest challenges in bipolar treatment is staying on medication:

  • Many people stop during well periods
  • Side effects lead to discontinuation
  • Feeling good is misinterpreted as not needing medication
  • Stopping usually leads to relapse
  • Finding the right medication improves adherence

Categories of Bipolar Medication

Mood Stabilizers

These medications reduce mood fluctuations in both directions:

Lithium:
The original and still often the most effective mood stabilizer.

Anticonvulsants:
Medications originally developed for seizures that stabilize mood.

Atypical Antipsychotics

Originally developed for psychosis, many help stabilize mood in bipolar disorder.

Antidepressants

Used cautiously in bipolar depression, typically with mood stabilizers.

Other Medications

Benzodiazepines, sleep aids, and other medications may supplement treatment.

Lithium

How It Works

Lithium’s exact mechanism isn’t fully understood, but it:

  • Affects multiple neurotransmitter systems
  • May protect brain cells
  • Reduces both mania and depression
  • Reduces suicide risk (unique benefit)

Benefits

  • Gold standard for bipolar I
  • Effective for acute mania
  • Prevents manic recurrence
  • Reduces suicide risk
  • Decades of evidence
  • May prevent bipolar depression

Considerations

Monitoring Required:
– Blood levels must be checked regularly
– Kidney function monitoring
– Thyroid function monitoring
– Levels affected by hydration, salt, medications

Side Effects:
– Increased thirst and urination
– Weight gain
– Tremor
– Cognitive effects (“lithium fog”)
– Thyroid problems (long-term)
– Kidney effects (long-term)
– Acne
– Nausea

Toxicity:
– Narrow therapeutic window
– Too much lithium is dangerous
– Signs include severe tremor, confusion, vomiting
– Medical emergency if suspected

Who Benefits Most

  • Bipolar I with classic presentation
  • Those with euphoric (vs. mixed) mania
  • Family history of lithium response
  • When suicide risk is a concern

Anticonvulsant Mood Stabilizers

Valproate/Divalproex (Depakote)

How It Works:
Affects GABA and other neurotransmitter systems.

Benefits:
– Effective for acute mania
– Works faster than lithium
– Helpful for mixed episodes
– Helpful for rapid cycling
– Less monitoring than lithium

Considerations:

Side Effects:
– Weight gain
– Hair loss
– Tremor
– Sedation
– Gastrointestinal effects
– Liver effects (rare but serious)

Warnings:
– Not for women of childbearing potential (severe birth defects)
– Liver function monitoring needed
– Weight effects can be significant

Carbamazepine (Tegretol)

Benefits:
– Effective for acute mania
– Alternative to lithium and valproate
– May help some non-responders

Considerations:
– Drug interactions (affects many medications)
– Monitoring required (blood cells, liver, sodium)
– Side effects: dizziness, drowsiness, rash
– Rare but serious blood and skin reactions

Lamotrigine (Lamictal)

How It Works:
Affects sodium channels and glutamate.

Benefits:
– Excellent for preventing bipolar depression
– Fewer cognitive side effects
– Weight neutral
– Well-tolerated by many

Considerations:
– Must be titrated very slowly (rash risk)
– Serious rash (Stevens-Johnson syndrome) possible if titrated too fast
– Less effective for acute mania
– Takes time to reach therapeutic dose

Unique Role:
Lamotrigine is the go-to for depression prevention in bipolar disorder, though it takes 6+ weeks to reach full dose.

Oxcarbazepine (Trileptal)

  • Sometimes used as alternative to carbamazepine
  • Fewer drug interactions
  • Less evidence than other anticonvulsants

Atypical Antipsychotics

These medications have become central to bipolar treatment:

For Mania

Quetiapine (Seroquel):
– Effective for acute mania
– Also effective for bipolar depression
– Sedating (can help with sleep and agitation)
– Weight gain and metabolic effects

Risperidone (Risperdal):
– Effective for acute mania
– Can be combined with mood stabilizers
– Less sedating than quetiapine
– Movement side effects possible

Olanzapine (Zyprexa):
– Very effective for acute mania
– Available with fluoxetine for bipolar depression (Symbyax)
– Significant weight gain and metabolic effects
– Sedating

Aripiprazole (Abilify):
– Effective for acute mania
– Less sedating
– Less weight gain than some
– Can be activating
– Also approved for maintenance

Ziprasidone (Geodon):
– Effective for acute mania
– Weight neutral
– Must be taken with food
– QT prolongation concern

Asenapine (Saphris):
– Sublingual tablet
– Effective for acute mania
– Mouth numbness common

Cariprazine (Vraylar):
– Approved for mania and mixed episodes
– Also approved for bipolar depression
– Less weight gain
– Relatively newer option

For Bipolar Depression

Quetiapine (Seroquel):
– FDA-approved for bipolar depression
– Evidence for both bipolar I and II

Lurasidone (Latuda):
– FDA-approved for bipolar I depression
– Must be taken with food
– Less metabolic effects
– Not sedating

Olanzapine/Fluoxetine (Symbyax):
– Combination product
– First approved for bipolar depression
– Significant weight gain

Cariprazine (Vraylar):
– Approved for bipolar depression
– Newer option

For Maintenance

Several atypical antipsychotics are approved for long-term prevention of episodes.

Common Side Effects

Vary by medication but may include:
– Weight gain and metabolic syndrome
– Sedation
– Movement disorders (akathisia, tardive dyskinesia)
– Hormonal effects
– Cognitive effects

Antidepressants in Bipolar Disorder

The Controversy

Antidepressants for bipolar depression are controversial because:

  • Can trigger mania or hypomania
  • May accelerate cycling
  • Evidence for effectiveness is mixed
  • Generally shouldn’t be used alone

Current Guidelines

If antidepressants are used:

  • Always with mood stabilizer
  • Short-term rather than maintenance
  • Monitor for switching
  • Bupropion and SSRIs generally preferred
  • Discontinue after depression resolves

When They Might Be Used

  • Bipolar II (lower switching risk)
  • When depression is primary problem
  • With mood stabilizer protection
  • When other options haven’t worked

Finding the Right Medication

The Process

Finding optimal medication often involves:

  1. Starting with first-line options
  2. Adjusting doses
  3. Monitoring response and side effects
  4. Adding or switching medications as needed
  5. Fine-tuning over time

Factors Considered

Illness Features:
– Bipolar I vs. II
– Predominant polarity (mania vs. depression)
– Mixed features
– Rapid cycling
– Psychotic features
– Episode frequency

Personal Factors:
– Side effect sensitivity
– Weight concerns
– Cognitive concerns
– Childbearing potential
– Other medical conditions
– Other medications
– Past medication responses
– Family history of medication response

Combination Therapy

Many people need more than one medication:

  • Mood stabilizer + antipsychotic
  • Lithium + lamotrigine
  • Multiple strategies for different phases
  • Adjunctive medications for specific symptoms

Managing Side Effects

Common Strategies

Weight Gain:
– Monitor weight from the start
– Dietary awareness
– Exercise
– Consider medication with less weight effect
– Metformin sometimes added

Cognitive Effects:
– Dose adjustment
– Timing changes
– Switch medications
– Give time for adaptation

Sedation:
– Bedtime dosing
– Dose adjustment
– May improve over time

Metabolic Effects:
– Regular monitoring
– Lifestyle factors
– Treatment if needed

When Side Effects Are Intolerable

  • Communicate with prescriber
  • Don’t stop abruptly
  • Usually alternatives exist
  • Balance benefits vs. side effects

Medication Adherence

Why People Stop

  • Feel better (“I’m cured”)
  • Side effects
  • Miss highs of hypomania
  • Stigma
  • Denial of illness
  • Cost
  • Complexity

Staying on Track

  • Understand the illness
  • Know the consequences of stopping
  • Report side effects (they can often be managed)
  • Use pill boxes or reminders
  • Involve support system
  • Regular follow-up

If You Want to Stop

  • Talk to your prescriber first
  • Don’t stop suddenly
  • Understand the risks
  • Have a monitoring plan
  • Be willing to restart if needed

Working with Your Prescriber

Being a Good Partner

  • Keep appointments
  • Report symptoms honestly
  • Report side effects
  • Ask questions
  • Discuss concerns about medications
  • Report if you’re not taking as prescribed

Questions to Ask

  • Why this medication?
  • What should I expect?
  • What side effects should I watch for?
  • How long until it works?
  • What if it doesn’t work?
  • How will we monitor my response?

Moving Forward

Medication is the foundation of bipolar disorder treatment. While finding the right combination can take time and patience, the result—mood stability, fewer episodes, better functioning—is worth the effort.

The medication that works best for you depends on your specific type of bipolar disorder, your symptoms, your body, and your life circumstances. There’s no one-size-fits-all approach. Work closely with your prescriber, be honest about what you’re experiencing, and give each medication a fair trial.

Your brain chemistry is unique. With persistence and good communication, you can find the medication approach that helps you live well with bipolar disorder.

This article is for educational purposes only and is not a substitute for professional medical advice. Always consult with your healthcare provider before starting, stopping, or changing any medication. Arise Counseling Services offers compassionate, professional support for individuals and families throughout Pennsylvania.

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