Emotional Responses
Theories and Life Cycle
Depression and Bipolar Disorders

Special Mood Disorders
Medications and Nursing Interventions
100

These are normal human responses such as sadness, joy, anger, fear, and grief.

Emotions

100

This theory focuses on neurotransmitters, genetics, hormones, sleep rhythms, and brain chemistry.

Biological theory

100

This is a period of significant depressive symptoms lasting long enough to cause distress or impairment.

Depressive episode

100

This mood disorder pattern commonly occurs in fall or winter with low energy, oversleeping, and carbohydrate cravings.

Seasonal affective disorder

100

SSRIs, SNRIs, tricyclics, MAOIs, and atypical agents belong to this drug group.

Antidepressants

200

This occurs when emotional responses become persistent, extreme, or disruptive to daily functioning.

Mood disorder

200

This theory focuses on negative thought patterns such as “I am worthless” or “Nothing will get better.”

Cognitive theory

200

This is a diagnosed pattern of depressive symptoms or episodes over time.

Depressive disorder

200

This treatment uses timed exposure to bright light and may help some clients with seasonal depression.

Light therapy

200

Lithium, valproate, carbamazepine, and lamotrigine belong to this mood disorder treatment group.

Mood stabilizers

300

This type of emotional response is appropriate to the situation, temporary, manageable, and not severely impairing.

Healthy emotional response

300

This theory connects mood symptoms to unresolved conflict, early experiences, or anger turned inward.

Psychodynamic theory

300

This mood state includes elevated or irritable mood, increased energy, decreased need for sleep, pressured speech, and risky behavior.

Mania

300

This treatment uses timed exposure to bright light and may help some clients with seasonal depression.

Postpartum depression

300

These medications may be used for mania, bipolar depression, severe depression with psychosis, or mood stabilization.

Antipsychotics

400

Persistent hopelessness, inability to function, suicidal thoughts, or psychosis may indicate this level of mood disturbance.

Severe mood disturbance

400

This theory focuses on trauma, loss, isolation, poverty, chronic illness, or lack of support.

Environmental or social theory

400

This bipolar disorder requires at least one manic episode.

Bipolar I disorder

400

Hallucinations, delusions, severe confusion, or thoughts of harming self or baby after childbirth suggest this emergency condition.

Postpartum psychosis

400

This nursing intervention involves asking directly about suicidal thoughts, plan, means, and past attempts.

Suicide risk assessment

500

This is the priority nursing concern when a client expresses hopelessness and thoughts of death.

Safety or suicide risk assessment

500

In children, depression may appear as stomachaches, school problems, clinginess, sleep changes, or this behavior.

Regression

500

This bipolar disorder includes at least one hypomanic episode and one major depressive episode, with no full manic episode.

Bipolar II disorder

500

This behavior associated with postpartum depression may make a parent feel ashamed or afraid to ask for help.

Feeling disconnected from the baby or difficulty bonding

500

A client has not slept for three days, is speaking rapidly, pacing constantly, and says they are starting several businesses tonight. The nurse recognizes these cues as this mood state.

Mania