24581-full
jumpking
Sex: M
Data Quality: 1 star
Bipolar I
Depression: 0
Mania: 0
Emotional: 0
Anxiety: 0
Compulsion: 0
External Stress: Moderate
Rx Therapy
58 M
Function: High
Distress: Low
jumpking
Male, 58 years
TN, United States
Primary Condition
Bipolar I and 9 more
First symptom
Diagnosis

About jumpking

I’m a white male, 57 years old. I had my first manic/psychotic episode in 1972 when I had just turned 18. I was mistakenly diagnosed as paranoid-schizophrenic. The diagnosis was changed to manic-depression in the spring of 1978 after a serious episode, and I started lithium treatment. I have been hospitalized over 16 times thus far as a direct result of my mental illness. Between 1972 and 1996 (my last hospitalization) I have averaged being hospitalized once every 17 months. After years of trying just about every anti-psychotic medication, I finally found one that worked for me.

Profile Activity
15,331 Views
Member since: Nov 24, 2008 Last Login Feb 26, 2012

Other Conditions

  1. Alcohol addiction
    First symptom
    ?
    Diagnosis
    Undiagnosed
  2. Bipolar Disorder
    First symptom
    ?
    Diagnosis
  3. Chronic Kidney Disease
    First symptom
    Diagnosis
  4. Drug Addiction
    First symptom
    ?
    Diagnosis
    Undiagnosed
  5. Generalized Anxiety Disorder
    First symptom
    ?
    Diagnosis
    Undiagnosed
  6. Panic Disorder
    First symptom
    ?
    Diagnosis
    Undiagnosed
  7. Social Anxiety Disorder
    First symptom
    ?
    Diagnosis
    Undiagnosed
  8. Tardive dyskinesia
    First symptom
    ?
    Diagnosis
    ?
  9. Tobacco Addiction
    First symptom
    Diagnosis
    Undiagnosed

More About jumpking

Zyprexa. 

Prior to 1973, I was a carefree, happy go lucky guy, with a great looking girlfriend and a large circle of friends.  I was an athlete, a star baseball player since I was 12.  I loved to party which included drinking beer and smoking pot, which was quite common during those days.  But on the day that I turned 18, my life became confused and uncertain.  Pressing thoughts starting running through my mind:  did I believe in pre-marital sex; would I go to war if drafted; did I think it was OK to drink and smoke pot; and perhaps the weightiest one of all – did I believe in God.  I was now 18, an adult, solely responsible for my thoughts and actions.  I spent long hours walking alone trying to figure out who I was.  I couldn’t eat and slowly became incoherent.  Within days I ended up in a hospital psychiatric ward.

That was the beginning of my illness.  I have been fighting this disease now for over 39 years.  During that time, I have been addicted to both drugs and alcohol (self-medication), suffered from panic disorders, social anxiety disorders, and general anxiety disorders.  I would be hospitalized over 16 times for four to six weeks at a time.  My illness seemed to follow the same pattern:  sudden lack of sleep, racing thoughts, preoccupation with religious ideas, followed by delusions and then psychosis.  I could go for one to two years symptom free, but then, without warning, I’d find myself back in the hospital. 

For many years, I considered myself to be treatment resistance.  I have tried just about every typical antipsychotic medication.  My main maintenance medication for over 21 years was lithium.  I maintained a lithium level approaching 1.0, but I had to quit taking it because I developed chronic kidney disease.  Zyprexa changed all that. 

Currently, all my symptoms are under control with the exception of Tardive Dyskinesia. I seem to be the only one on the site that suffers from TD, but I attribute that to all my hospitalizations and exposures to older antipsychotic medications. As an update, I think I've finally found my solution to my tobacco addiction: the electronic cigarette. I had to do a lot of research to find something that worked.  I'm still addicted to nicotine, but at least it's not causing me any health problems.

At present, I am the president a peer led depression bipolar support group.  This support group provides a forum for individuals who suffer from depression and bipolar disorder symptoms who are seeking help in managing their illness.