History of bipolar disorder

The history of recorded bipolar disorder can be traced back to the ancient Greek period 2000 years ago. Even so, the extremes of emotions – depression [depression] and mania – are clearly identified – as a disease that alleviates volatility.

This is the famous Greek doctor Aretaeus of Cappadocia, who first proposed that these extreme emotions are part of the same disease, but it was not until a long time later that this view gained momentum.

In Paris in the 18th century, there was a major change in the way caregivers were treated. Through more compassionate treatments, the importance of observing and documenting the disease was emphasized, and the link between mania and depression was restored again. This is just because the detailed clinical record makes some important things happen.

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In the 1850s, French psychiatrist Jean-Pierre Falret called bipolar disorder called "folie circulaire" – highlighting the cyclic nature of bipolar disorder, from mania to depression. "Folie" in French refers to fanaticism, madness, madness or insanity, literally translated as "circle madness."

At about the same time, the French neurologist Jules Baillarger described these extreme emotional changes as merely "dual forms" of different stages of the same disease, translated as "dual form of madness" .

German psychiatrist Emil Kraepelin first used the term manic depression to describe these stages in 1899. However, until a long time later, another German, Karl Kleist, separated the monopolar depression without mania or mild mania in 1953, and

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The term bipolar disorder was born.

History of bipolar disorder was originally published on Spring

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