Bipolar Psychiatrist in Manchester, CT — The Episodes That Are Both at Once

Bipolar disorder treatment in Manchester CT

Most people think of bipolar disorder as switching between two states — high and low, manic and depressed. And sometimes it is. But one of the least-talked-about experiences in bipolar disorder is the mixed state: when you're exhausted but can't rest, irritable for no clear reason, your mind is moving fast but nothing feels good. You can't sleep. You can't settle. You feel like you're running on a dead battery that someone keeps jumpstarting. If that sounds familiar — you're not imagining it, and you're not just "stressed." Mixed states are real, they're recognized, and they're treatable. Sindhia Shyras, APRN is a board-certified Psychiatric Nurse Practitioner who helps Manchester residents and people across Connecticut understand and manage the full range of bipolar disorder.

What a Mixed State Actually Feels Like

The word "mixed" undersells it. When depression and elevated mood happen simultaneously, you get something harder to name. You might snap at the people you love for no reason you can explain. You might cry and feel wired in the same hour. Sleep is broken even when you're bone-tired — your body wants to stop but your mind won't. Some people describe it as the worst of both worlds: the low mood and hopelessness of depression, combined with the energy and agitation of a manic episode. It's one of the most distressing bipolar experiences, and it's often the most dangerous — because the energy is there to act on the despair. If you're in this place, please reach out.

Why Mixed States Get Misread

Mixed states can look like anxiety disorders, personality issues, or just someone who's difficult to be around. Manchester is a working community — a lot of people push through on willpower — and that makes it easy to chalk a mixed episode up to stress, a bad week, or a caffeine problem. But if you've had multiple episodes like this, or if the irritability and agitation cycle in and out alongside your mood, that pattern is worth examining. Sindhia doesn't just treat where you are right now. She looks at the full timeline to understand what's actually driving it.

Frequently Asked Questions

Yes — for some people, mixed states are the most prominent feature of their bipolar disorder. They may not have clear-cut manic highs or depressive lows that are easy to separate out. That's part of what makes bipolar disorder tricky to diagnose. Sindhia will look at your full history — sleep patterns, energy cycles, mood shifts over months and years — to build an accurate picture. You don't have to fit a textbook description to get real help.

Standard antidepressants often aren't the right call for mixed states — and can sometimes make things worse. Mood stabilizers like valproate or atypical antipsychotics tend to be more effective. But the right medication depends on your specific history, what other episodes have looked like, and how you've responded to things in the past. That's why the evaluation matters — Sindhia doesn't guess. She figures out what actually fits your situation.

You can book directly online or call the office at (860) 515-8689. Telehealth is available for all of Connecticut, so you don't need to drive anywhere — you can do the evaluation from home. If you'd rather come in, the New Britain office at 1 Liberty Sq, Ste 301 is about 20 minutes from Manchester. Either way, getting started is the hard part. The appointment itself is just a conversation.

Serving Manchester, CT and all of Connecticut via telehealth.

Call (860) 515-8689 or book online below.

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