Depression tends to bring people into my office on its own. Mania and hypomania rarely do — because in the moment, they often feel good. Confidence is up, energy is up, ideas come fast. It's usually a partner, family member, or the aftermath (financial, professional, or relational) that brings the pattern to light.
This article covers what mania and hypomania actually look like, how they differ, and why recognising them early matters so much.
What Is a Manic Episode?
During mania, a person may feel full of energy, act without thinking, or feel unusually elated — these episodes are a clear change from someone's usual behaviour and can significantly affect daily life.[1] Common features include:
- Decreased need for sleep — feeling rested after very little sleep, not just difficulty sleeping
- Elevated, expansive, or irritable mood
- Racing thoughts and rapid, pressured speech
- Grandiosity — inflated self-esteem or unrealistic beliefs about one's abilities
- Increased goal-directed activity and impulsive decision-making, including spending, business ventures, or risky behaviour
For a formal diagnosis, these symptoms must be present for at least seven days, represent a noticeable change from usual behaviour, and be severe enough to cause impairment in social or occupational functioning, or require hospitalisation.
Patients often describe their manic episodes, in hindsight, as the sharpest and most alive they've ever felt — which makes the illness harder to treat, not easier. Part of my job is helping someone hold two truths at once: that the energy felt genuinely good, and that it caused genuine harm that needs to be prevented from happening again.
How Is Hypomania Different From Mania?
Hypomania is a milder form of mania — a person may feel very good, energised, or productive, and may still function well at work or socially, so they might not notice a problem even though others see changes in their mood or behaviour.[2] Because it can build slowly and doesn't necessarily disrupt daily life the way mania does, loved ones often notice the shift before the person experiencing it does.[2]
Why Does Hypomania Get Missed So Often?
Research has found that a substantial proportion of people diagnosed with major depression also show symptoms of subthreshold hypomania that don't fully meet diagnostic criteria — and those individuals tend to have an earlier age of onset, more coexisting health problems, and more depressive episodes than people with depression alone. A family history of mania was just as common among people with subthreshold hypomania as among those with a full bipolar diagnosis, suggesting it can be an early or milder marker of the same underlying vulnerability.
I always ask new depression patients about periods that were the opposite — unusually high energy, reduced need for sleep, unusually elevated confidence — even if that's not why they came in. Missing a hypomanic history is one of the most consequential errors in psychiatry, because treating "depression" with certain antidepressants alone, without recognising an underlying bipolar pattern, can sometimes trigger or worsen mood instability.
What Does Treatment Involve?
- Mood stabilisers or antipsychotic medication: The cornerstone of treatment, used both to manage an acute episode and to prevent future ones
- Psychotherapy: Helps patients recognise early warning signs of an emerging episode and build routines that protect stability, particularly around sleep
- Sleep and routine protection: Because disrupted sleep can both trigger and result from mood episodes, protecting a regular sleep schedule is a genuinely therapeutic intervention, not just good advice
- Family involvement: Loved ones are often the first to notice an emerging episode — involving them (with the patient's consent) in a relapse-prevention plan meaningfully improves outcomes
"The goal isn't to dull who you are — it's to keep the highs from costing you what the lows can't repay."
— Dr. Varun Gupta
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the difference between mania and hypomania?
They involve the same core symptoms, but mania is more severe, must last at least seven days, and causes significant impairment or may require hospitalisation. Hypomania is milder, lasts at least four days, and doesn't cause the same level of impairment.
Is hypomania actually a problem if the person feels fine?
Yes. Even though hypomania can feel productive at the time, it's often followed by a depressive episode, and untreated hypomania can escalate into full mania. It's frequently a marker of bipolar disorder that needs proper diagnosis and management.
Can mania happen without bipolar disorder?
Mania is most commonly associated with bipolar disorder, but manic-like symptoms can also be triggered by certain medications, substance use, or some medical conditions, which is why a proper psychiatric evaluation matters.
References
- Cleveland Clinic. Bipolar Disorder: What It Is, Symptoms & Treatment. my.clevelandclinic.org/health/diseases/9294-bipolar-disorder
- Cleveland Clinic. What Is Hypomania and How Is It Different From Mania? my.clevelandclinic.org/health/diseases/21774-hypomania
- National Institute of Mental Health. Bipolar Disorder. nimh.nih.gov/health/topics/bipolar-disorder
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Book a confidential consultation with Dr. Varun Gupta — MBBS, MD Psychiatry, Jammu.
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