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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
15 pages in length. The ever-progressing nature of medical technology has rendered the mental health industry a recipient of myriad psychopharmacological drugs that help patients afflicted with a number of conditions; from schizophrenia to bipolar and borderline disorder to depression, the extent to which psychopharmacological drugs have improved quality of life is both grand and far-reaching. One medication within this restorative arsenal – lithium – addresses several mental problems, not the least of which include mania, manic-depressive illness, depression, intermittent explosive disorder and mood instability. Bibliography lists 14 sources.
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File: LM1_TLCLithium.rtf
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disorder to depression, the extent to which psychopharmacological drugs have improved quality of life is both grand and far-reaching. One medication within this restorative arsenal - lithium - addresses
several mental problems, not the least of which include mania, manic-depressive illness, depression, intermittent explosive disorder and mood instability. II. HOW LITHIUM WORKS FOR CERTAIN MENTAL DISORDERS
Chemical imbalance in the brain has long been thought to be the cause for depression; as such, psychopharmacological drugs seek to restore the appropriate balance
that allows the brains ultra-sensitive circuitry to properly function. By decreasing the presence of certain chemicals that stimulate excitement, lithium has long been administered for manic episodes in bipolar
patients to address such indicators as anger, aggression, hyperactivity, sleep depravity, poor judgment and rushed speech. Considered for decades to be a disease
of the insane, depression has finally been recognized for the debilitating and emotionally unbalancing illness it truly is. With an astounding ten percent of all Americans suffering from clinical
depression (Anonymous, 2003), it can no longer be looked upon as nothing more than merely the blues. Additionally, health writer Michael Castleman notes that another five percent are victims
of occasional despondency, with one of every six people succumbing to a "serious, or major depressive episode at some point in life" (Anonymous, 2001, p. PG). Depression often hits
the elderly more than any other age group; however, with each passing year the average age of sufferers continues to drop (American Psychiatric Association, 2003). While depression causes people to
view the world in a warped perspective, this is not to say that they cannot function in such a manner that masks their disease. In fact, nearly three-quarters of
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