Manic Episode

A manic episode is a distinct period of unusually high or irritable mood, racing thoughts, and driven behaviour that lasts at least a week and is intense enough to impair functioning or require hospital care. It most commonly occurs as part of bipolar I disorder, though it can also be triggered by certain medicines or medical conditions.

Medicine used to treat Manic Episode

Abilify

Aripiprazole

5 · 10 · 15 · 20 · 30mg

This medication is formulated to address schizophrenia and manic episodes intended to support mental stability through balanced receptor modulation.

From $0.52 / tablet View

What a manic episode looks like

The shift from normal mood can be striking. A person may sleep very little yet feel full of energy, talk rapidly, and move from one idea or project to the next without finishing any. Grandiosity is common: an exaggerated sense of ability or importance that leads to risky decisions around money, relationships, or work. Some people become severely irritable rather than euphoric. In more intense episodes, psychotic features such as delusions or hallucinations may appear.

How manic episodes are managed

Prompt treatment matters because untreated mania tends to escalate. Mental health specialists typically use mood stabilisers or atypical antipsychotics to bring the episode under control. Aripiprazole is one agent used in this setting; it acts on dopamine and serotonin pathways to blunt the intensity of the episode. Longer-term, the goal shifts to preventing recurrence through ongoing medication and, where available, structured psychotherapy.

If someone is behaving in ways that put themselves or others at serious risk, contact local emergency services or bring them to the nearest hospital without delay.