Of course!
2007-10-12 07:41:08
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answer #1
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answered by Eye see! 6
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Yes and no. Some people in your family may not have bipolar disorder, but rather just depression. Or they may have an illness, but cover it up with drinking or drug abuse. More than depression, bipolar disorder is said to have a genetic component.
You never really know what goes on in another household (within your extended family). And a mere 30 years ago, depression was not discussed as much. It was kept behind closed doors.
Uncle Fred was on vacation in Florida, not in a mental hospital.
2007-10-12 07:49:12
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answer #2
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answered by Anonymous
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it particularly is achieveable yet unlikely. We debated merely this question on my help internet site and did a poll....... some million/2 the human beings there had no trauma or forget and actually had greater desirable than happy childhoods. those individuals normally are clinically determined with merely Bipolar ailment. people who did have undesirable childhoods normally had different subject concerns to boot to the Bipolar like Borderline or different character problems, OCD or different rigidity problems, PTSD, or perhaps like in my case Dissociative problems..... Borderline which has similarities to and oftentimes at a loss for words with Bipolar is the direct consequence if trauma or forget and is a character ailment (behavioral and not by way of chemical imbalances interior the strategies) jointly as Bipolar is exactly chemical...... a strategies ailment. It replaced into our end that Bipolar is exactly organic and organic (nature) jointly as different comparable problems or accompanying problems are the consequence of atmosphere (nurture).
2016-11-08 03:05:20
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answer #3
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answered by Anonymous
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Bi-polar and uni-polar mood disorders tend to be hereditary. Some distant relative may have had milder signs that were manageable. Someone with uni-polar depression in the family may not have had the opposite moods of bi-polar mania.
2007-10-12 08:22:36
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answer #4
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answered by Over The Rainbow 5
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its not hereditary its different from person to person. it doesn't matter if no one in your family has that particular diagnosis. Now, are there other diagnosis that run in your family. Regardless, it wouldn't matter.
Hope you are getting the proper treatment to support that diagnosis!
2007-10-12 07:53:28
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answer #5
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answered by Anonymous
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Yes. My mother-in-law has it and no one else she can remember in the family has.
2007-10-12 07:45:03
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answer #6
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answered by Anonymous
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Yes.
2007-10-12 07:40:43
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answer #7
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answered by nicedoc 5
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Try this web site to get information on it and more
www.panicsurvivor.com. Good luck.
2007-10-12 07:43:19
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answer #8
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answered by Irish 7
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yes it's possible and your're living proof of it.
2007-10-12 07:39:57
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answer #9
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answered by costdew 3
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