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General Parenting
is it a bi polar manic state?
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<blockquote data-quote="Marcie Mac" data-source="post: 128457" data-attributes="member: 47"><p>There could be so many diagnosis's not necessarily bi-polar. My youngest would go thru similar, but realllly bad ones after he had ingested sugar, chocolate (can you say crazed) and junk food. It was not a popular theory back then that certain foods can cause rages and outlandish behavior - I "knew" just by looking at his eyes in a full blown out of control rage that he had eaten something he should not have, and with enough hunting, sure enough would find the offending candy wrapper. No doctor back then would ever take it into consideration.</p><p> </p><p>Now that he is older, he has sort of grown out of the allergy. He has not grown out of the bi-polar however, but is much better now we don't have any foodstuff's contributing to the mania. He will pull an all niter when he has his "unable to sleep for maybe two days running" periods, but he "cleans house" - literally. I would find my house spotless, down to the dogs toys and bones being arranged size wise. Usually he does the cleaning thing when he has a lot of anxiety - its a trait I have passed down to him (but I am not bi-polar) just majorly adhd with panic/anxiety attacks.</p><p> </p><p>If you are going to take her in for another appointment, start journaling now as to when these occur. And please check what she is eating and see if there is any coralation between rages and food. </p><p> </p><p>Marcie</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Marcie Mac, post: 128457, member: 47"] There could be so many diagnosis's not necessarily bi-polar. My youngest would go thru similar, but realllly bad ones after he had ingested sugar, chocolate (can you say crazed) and junk food. It was not a popular theory back then that certain foods can cause rages and outlandish behavior - I "knew" just by looking at his eyes in a full blown out of control rage that he had eaten something he should not have, and with enough hunting, sure enough would find the offending candy wrapper. No doctor back then would ever take it into consideration. Now that he is older, he has sort of grown out of the allergy. He has not grown out of the bi-polar however, but is much better now we don't have any foodstuff's contributing to the mania. He will pull an all niter when he has his "unable to sleep for maybe two days running" periods, but he "cleans house" - literally. I would find my house spotless, down to the dogs toys and bones being arranged size wise. Usually he does the cleaning thing when he has a lot of anxiety - its a trait I have passed down to him (but I am not bi-polar) just majorly adhd with panic/anxiety attacks. If you are going to take her in for another appointment, start journaling now as to when these occur. And please check what she is eating and see if there is any coralation between rages and food. Marcie [/QUOTE]
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is it a bi polar manic state?
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