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<blockquote data-quote="DaisyFace" data-source="post: 236461" data-attributes="member: 6546"><p>Wow!</p><p> </p><p>Thanks, MW, for sharing this...this is information that we definitely did not have. If the Celexa really will begin to cause "angry mania"--then we are headed for a train wreck!!</p><p> </p><p>I am not sure about bi-polar, because we never see upswings in her emotional state...without Celexa she just goes from irritated to angry to angrier. I would think that with a bi-polar disorder, we would being seeing "high" points--where she is very manic and overly excitable about everything and then then "low" points where she is depressed and down and feels upset. </p><p> </p><p>But perhaps I have a misunderstanding of 'bi-polar'?</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="DaisyFace, post: 236461, member: 6546"] Wow! Thanks, MW, for sharing this...this is information that we definitely did not have. If the Celexa really will begin to cause "angry mania"--then we are headed for a train wreck!! I am not sure about bi-polar, because we never see upswings in her emotional state...without Celexa she just goes from irritated to angry to angrier. I would think that with a bi-polar disorder, we would being seeing "high" points--where she is very manic and overly excitable about everything and then then "low" points where she is depressed and down and feels upset. But perhaps I have a misunderstanding of 'bi-polar'? [/QUOTE]
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