Bipolar Disorder Treatment in Stamford, CT

Stamford moves fast. Fairfield County runs on performance — finance, consulting, the constant hum of people who commuted to Manhattan for years and now work just as hard from home offices in the North End. And when your mood is starting to slip in ways that feel bigger than stress, bigger than a rough quarter, it can be hard to know what you're actually dealing with. Bipolar disorder doesn't always look like what people picture. A lot of people in Stamford have been managing what felt like depression for years — sometimes treated with antidepressants that didn't quite work, or worked for a while and then stopped — without ever realizing that the full picture was something different. At Elite Health LLC, Sindhia Shyras, APRN brings over nine years of psychiatric experience to exactly that kind of careful, thorough evaluation. Getting the right diagnosis matters here. The wrong treatment doesn't just fail to help — it can actually make bipolar worse.

Bipolar disorder treatment in Stamford, CT at Elite Health LLC

Why Bipolar Is So Often Misdiagnosed as Depression

Here's the thing about bipolar disorder that doesn't get said enough: most people with it spend far more time depressed than they do elevated. That means when someone finally walks into a provider's office — exhausted, struggling to function, feeling low — the depression is front and center, and the hypomanic or manic episodes might be months or years in the past. Or they might not have been recognized as episodes at all. In Stamford, a lot of people describe their "high" periods as just feeling good for once, productive, sharp — like they were finally firing on all cylinders after months of fog. So they never mention it. And without that piece of the picture, the diagnosis lands on unipolar depression. Antidepressants get prescribed. Sometimes they help a little. Sometimes they trigger agitation, racing thoughts, or a rebound crash that's worse than what came before. It's only when someone takes a full psychiatric history — including those periods of unusual energy, decreased need for sleep, increased talkativeness, or impulsive decisions — that the real pattern becomes clear.

The Spectrum of Bipolar — It's Not All Dramatic Mood Swings

Bipolar I, bipolar II, cyclothymia — these aren't just different names for the same thing. They're meaningfully different presentations, and they call for different approaches. Bipolar I involves full manic episodes — the kind that can escalate to hospitalization if untreated. Bipolar II is characterized by hypomania: elevated or irritable mood that's less severe and doesn't reach full mania, but is still disruptive, still costly, still part of a pattern that affects your life. Cyclothymia involves milder cycling that doesn't hit the threshold for full episodes — but that doesn't mean it's not real, and it doesn't mean it's not affecting your relationships, your work, and your sense of stability. Then there are mixed states — where someone feels activated and agitated and hopeless at the same time, which can be the most distressing presentation of all. Figuring out where someone actually falls on that spectrum takes time and real clinical experience. It's not something a quick screening tool resolves.

Medication Management for Bipolar in Stamford — What to Expect

If you're used to the pace of Fairfield County, you probably want to know what treatment actually looks like — not in vague terms, but concretely. Mood stabilizers are typically the foundation: lithium is one of the most studied medications in psychiatry, with decades of evidence behind it. Depakote and Lamictal are also commonly used. Atypical antipsychotics like Seroquel, Abilify, Latuda, and Zyprexa play a role for many people, particularly during acute phases or when a mood stabilizer alone isn't quite enough. Some medications require regular blood level monitoring — lithium and Depakote both do. That's not unusual or alarming; it's just part of managing them safely. Sindhia Shyras will walk you through what's appropriate for your specific situation, adjusting based on how you respond and checking in regularly enough to catch early signs of an episode before it becomes a crisis. And telehealth is available throughout Connecticut — so if getting to our New Britain office doesn't fit your schedule, you don't have to choose between care and convenience.

Common Questions

Yes — and this is one of the reasons getting the right diagnosis matters so much. For someone with bipolar disorder, antidepressants prescribed without a mood stabilizer can sometimes trigger a hypomanic or manic episode, accelerate mood cycling, or cause a rebound crash that's worse than the original depression. This doesn't mean antidepressants are never used in bipolar — but they need to be used carefully, in the right context, with a mood stabilizer in place. If you've tried several antidepressants and found them either ineffective or destabilizing, that history is worth exploring. It might point toward a bipolar diagnosis that nobody has formally evaluated for yet.

The main distinction comes down to the severity of the elevated episodes. Bipolar I involves full manic episodes — periods of significantly elevated or irritable mood that last at least a week and can be severe enough to require hospitalization. Bipolar II involves hypomania instead: elevated mood that's real and disruptive, but less extreme. It doesn't reach full mania. That might sound like Bipolar II is "easier," but people with Bipolar II often spend more time in depressive episodes and the hypomania can drive decisions — impulsive spending, relationship strain, sleeping three hours a night for a week — that have real consequences. Neither type is minor. Both deserve proper evaluation and care.

Yes. Elite Health LLC offers telehealth throughout Connecticut, including Stamford and Fairfield County. For stable bipolar management — regular medication check-ins, monitoring for early episode signs, adjusting doses — telehealth works well. You don't need to drive to New Britain every time. If you're in a more acute phase or need a more intensive evaluation, we'll talk through what makes sense. But for ongoing care, video appointments are a practical option that most people find works without compromise. You just need to be physically located in Connecticut at the time of the appointment.

Getting the Right Diagnosis Changes Everything

If you're in Stamford and wondering whether what you've been calling depression might be something more, Sindhia Shyras at Elite Health LLC can help you figure that out — and build a plan that actually fits. Telehealth available across all of Connecticut.

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