Understanding the link between bipolar disorder and addiction
If you live with bipolar disorder and also struggle with alcohol or drugs, you are far from alone. Up to 60% of people with bipolar disorder develop a substance use disorder at some point in their lives, which makes co‑occurring bipolar disorder and addiction one of the most common and challenging dual diagnoses in mental health care [1].
Bipolar disorder affects over 1% of the global population, and among people with bipolar disorder, at least 40% will experience a substance use disorder [2]. Nearly 60% of individuals hospitalized for manic or mixed episodes have had a substance use disorder at some point in their lives [2]. These numbers show that if you are dealing with both conditions, your experience is common, not a personal failure.
When you look closer at bipolar disorder and addiction treatment, one theme stands out. You need a plan that addresses both at the same time, with careful psychiatric oversight, structured routines, and therapies that help you stabilize your mood while you work toward sobriety.
How bipolar symptoms and substances interact
The relationship between bipolar disorder and substance use is bidirectional. Each condition can intensify the other, and that is one reason treatment can feel complicated and overwhelming [1].
Manic cycles and impulsivity
During manic or hypomanic episodes, you may feel:
- Extremely energized or restless
- Less need for sleep
- Intensely confident or invincible
- Driven to pursue pleasurable activities without considering the consequences
That combination of energy, reduced inhibition, and impulsivity can make you more likely to:
- Experiment with substances for excitement or novelty
- Use larger amounts than you intended
- Engage in high risk behavior while intoxicated
People with bipolar I disorder have a 5.8 times increased lifetime risk of a substance use disorder diagnosis compared with the general population, even after adjusting for other mental health conditions [3]. Manic cycles and impulsivity are key reasons for this higher risk.
Depressive lows and self‑medication
On the other side of the cycle, depressive episodes can bring:
- Low energy and difficulty functioning
- Hopelessness and emotional pain
- Loss of interest in usual activities
In those moments, substances can look like a quick way to dull emotional discomfort or escape your thoughts. You might drink to fall asleep or use stimulants to push through exhaustion. Over time, that pattern can turn into a full substance use disorder, which then feeds back into your mood instability.
Substance triggered mood episodes
Substances can trigger or worsen manic, mixed, or depressive episodes. Alcohol, stimulants, cannabis, opioids, and sedatives all affect brain systems that are involved in bipolar disorder, including dopamine, serotonin, and GABA pathways [2].
You may notice that:
- Stimulants or heavy alcohol use can tip you into a manic or mixed state
- Withdrawal from alcohol or sedatives can intensify irritability, anxiety, or mood swings
- Irregular use of substances disrupts your sleep and daily rhythms, which destabilizes your mood
This is why mood stabilization is a central goal when you look for treatment for bipolar disorder and substance use. Managing substances without stabilizing mood usually does not hold up, and trying to stabilize mood while continuing to use tends to fail as well.
Why bipolar disorder increases addiction risk
Understanding why bipolar disorder increases your risk for addiction can help you approach treatment with more clarity and less self‑blame.
Shared biological vulnerabilities
Genetic and neurobiological factors partly explain why bipolar disorder and substance use disorders cluster together. Research suggests that:
- Both conditions are linked to vulnerabilities in dopamine regulation
- Serotonergic and GABAergic systems, which affect mood, anxiety, and reward, play roles in each
- First degree relatives of people with bipolar disorder show higher risks for both bipolar disorder and substance use disorders [2]
This means you may have an inherited predisposition that makes you more sensitive to both mood episodes and the rewarding effects of substances. It is not about weakness or poor character. It is about biology and environment interacting over time.
Trauma and emotional regulation
Unresolved trauma is common in people with bipolar disorder and in those with substance use disorders. Childhood physical abuse, in particular, increases the risk that someone with bipolar disorder will develop cannabis or other substance dependence [4].
If you grew up in an environment where your emotions were unsafe or ignored, substances can become an attempt at emotional regulation. They might feel like the only tools you have to manage intense distress, shame, or fear. A trauma informed approach in bipolar disorder and addiction treatment helps you develop healthier ways to handle those emotional storms.
Social and functional consequences
Addiction comorbidity in bipolar disorder is linked to more severe manic episodes and higher risks of violence, suicide, and relapse [3].
As substances disrupt work, relationships, and finances, your stress level rises. That stress then destabilizes your mood further. You may miss appointments, stop medications, or lose support systems. Breaking this cycle usually requires structured support, not just willpower.
Why you need integrated treatment, not separate care
In the past, you might have been told to get sober before addressing bipolar symptoms or to stabilize your mood first and deal with substances later. Evidence now suggests that this split approach does not work well for most people with co‑occurring bipolar disorder and addiction.
Integrated treatment means your care team addresses both conditions at the same time, under one coordinated plan.
When bipolar disorder and addiction are treated together in integrated programs, outcomes are better than when each condition is treated in isolation or in a disconnected sequence [1].
What an integrated program usually includes
Although specific programs vary, integrated treatment for bipolar disorder and substance use often combines:
- Psychiatric oversight
You work with a psychiatrist who has experience with dual diagnosis. They monitor your mood, sleep, and thinking patterns, adjust medications, and coordinate with your therapy team. This oversight is especially important during early sobriety, when mood swings can be intense. - Mood stabilizing medication
Mood stabilizers such as lithium or valproate are commonly used in bipolar disorder. Lithium has documented antisuicide benefits [2]. Some research suggests valproate and lamotrigine may be particularly useful when bipolar disorder occurs with substance use, although the evidence base is still limited and more large, controlled trials are needed [5].Your provider will weigh benefits, side effects, your substance use history, and your personal preferences to build a medication plan.
- Medications for substance use
For alcohol use disorder, medications such as naltrexone can reduce cravings. Naltrexone has been found to be safe and generally well tolerated in people with bipolar disorder and does not seem to destabilize mood, although larger trials are still needed [3].
For opioid dependence, methadone or buprenorphine are standard treatments, often combined with counseling and behavioral therapies [2]. - Evidence based psychotherapies
Therapies with strong support in dual diagnosis care include:
- Cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT)
- Dialectical behavior therapy (DBT)
- Integrated cognitive behavioral therapy (ICBT)
- Motivational interviewing
- Contingency management
These approaches help you understand triggers, challenge unhelpful thoughts, build emotion regulation skills, and stay engaged in treatment [6].
- Group and skills based therapies specific to bipolar and addiction
Integrated Group Therapy (IGT), a CBT based group intervention tailored for bipolar disorder and substance use, has been shown to reduce both substance use and mood symptoms when combined with medication [4].Interpersonal and Social Rhythm Therapy (IPSRT), which focuses on stabilizing your daily routines and circadian rhythms, helps with relapse prevention and life satisfaction in bipolar disorder. While it has not been studied specifically in bipolar patients with substance use disorders, stabilizing routines is very likely to support sobriety indirectly [4].
The role of structure and routine
Structured programs such as residential rehab, partial hospitalization, or intensive outpatient treatment can be especially helpful if your cycles are severe or your substance use is frequent. Regular wake times, meals, therapy sessions, and sleep schedules support mood stabilization. Over time, you learn to build and maintain a daily rhythm that protects your mental health.
If you want to explore more about how bipolar symptoms and substance use interact, you can read about bipolar and substance abuse and how different substances, including alcohol and drugs, play into mood cycles.
Bipolar disorder, alcohol, and drugs: how each affects you
Not all substances affect bipolar disorder in the same way. Understanding some common patterns can help you and your treatment team plan more effectively.
| Substance type | Common short term effects in bipolar disorder | Longer term risks in bipolar disorder |
|---|---|---|
| Alcohol | Temporary reduction in anxiety or agitation, worsened impulsivity, sleep disruption | Increased frequency of manic and mixed episodes, higher suicide risk, poorer medication adherence |
| Stimulants (cocaine, meth, some misused ADHD meds) | Rapid mood elevation, racing thoughts, decreased need for sleep | Persistent mood instability, psychosis, crash related depression, cardiovascular risks |
| Cannabis | Short term relief of tension for some people, possible paranoia or anxiety for others | Higher risk of psychosis in vulnerable individuals, cognitive dulling, motivational decline |
| Opioids | Numbing of physical and emotional pain, sedation | Dependence, overdose risk, worsening depression and anhedonia |
| Sedatives / benzodiazepines | Short term anxiety reduction, sedation | Dependence, rebound anxiety, disrupted sleep architecture, memory issues |
Substance use disorders across alcohol, stimulants, tobacco, opioids, and cannabis are all more common in people with bipolar disorder than in the general population, and they represent a major challenge in clinical practice [5].
Because alcohol is so widely used, problems with bipolar and alcohol addiction are particularly common. Alcohol can appear to calm you during agitation, but it fragments your sleep and reduces the effectiveness of mood stabilizers. Stimulants, opioids, and sedatives often show up in bipolar and drug addiction, either as prescribed medications that are misused or as illicit drugs used to self medicate mood states.
Diagnostic challenges and why they matter for your care
One of the practical difficulties with bipolar disorder and addiction treatment is accurate diagnosis. Many symptoms of substance use or withdrawal can mimic bipolar episodes.
Overlapping symptoms
Substance related states can cause:
- Euphoria
- Disinhibition
- Irritability
- Sleep loss
- Racing thoughts
- Psychotic features
These overlap heavily with manic or mixed episodes. On the other side, withdrawal can look like a depressive or mixed state. Because of this, mental health professionals use structured tools such as the Structured Clinical Interview for DSM (SCID) and the Psychiatric Research Interview for Substance and Mental Disorders (PRISM) to improve diagnostic accuracy, always combined with clinical judgment and a careful history [2].
Why getting the diagnosis right is important
Accurate diagnosis matters because:
- The choice of mood stabilizers and other psychiatric medications depends on whether your symptoms are primarily bipolar, substance induced, or both
- The timing of medication changes needs to consider when you last used substances, when you might go into withdrawal, and how your sleep is changing
- You and your team need a shared understanding of your patterns, so you can recognize early warning signs and take action before a full episode develops
If you have ever felt like providers were unsure whether substances or bipolar disorder were driving your symptoms, know that this is a common and recognized challenge in the field. It is not in your head. A dual diagnosis program is more likely to have the tools and experience to sort these questions out.
Medication, therapy, and adherence in dual diagnosis care
You may already know that medications and therapy help with bipolar disorder, and that counseling and, in some cases, medications help with addiction. In dual diagnosis care, your ability to stick with these treatments consistently becomes even more critical.
Medication considerations
Pharmacological treatment for co‑occurring bipolar disorder and substance use disorders is an active area of research. At this point:
- Mood stabilizers such as lithium and valproate remain core treatments. Lithium’s antisuicide effects are especially valuable in a population with elevated suicide risk [2].
- A systematic review of 29 studies suggests valproate and lamotrigine may have advantages in treating both mood symptoms and substance use outcomes, but most studies have small sample sizes and open label designs, so current recommendations are still preliminary [5].
- Trials of lithium for alcohol dependence in people with prior depression have not shown clear benefits for alcohol consumption or mood. Sodium valproate may reduce alcohol use but has not consistently improved mood scores in these small studies [3].
There is a clear need for larger, well designed trials to refine medication strategies for dual diagnosis, and current guidelines reflect the best available but still limited evidence [5].
Medications for addiction within bipolar care
Integrating addiction pharmacotherapy into bipolar treatment can improve stability, especially when combined with psychosocial therapies. For example:
- Naltrexone for alcohol use disorder, as noted earlier, appears safe in people with bipolar disorder and can support reduced drinking without destabilizing mood in small pilot studies [3].
- Methadone or buprenorphine for opioid dependence help reduce cravings and withdrawal, which in turn reduces stress on your mood system [2].
Any medication plan should include regular monitoring, clear communication about side effects, and a realistic discussion of benefits and limitations.
Staying engaged with treatment
Mood swings and cravings both interfere with consistent treatment. You might feel excellent during a hypomanic phase and question whether you need medication at all. During craving spikes, you might skip therapy to use substances instead. Over time, this pattern leads to relapse in both mood and substance use.
Maintaining medication adherence and therapy engagement is therefore essential, but it also requires strategies tailored to bipolar disorder and addiction, such as:
- Building routines for taking medications that align with your daily schedule
- Planning in advance for periods when you know you are more likely to become impulsive or discouraged
- Involving trusted family members or peers who can help you notice early warning signs and encourage follow through [1]
Integrated programs often combine motivational interviewing, CBT, and contingency management to support adherence and reduce dropout [4].
What to look for in bipolar disorder and addiction treatment
When you are choosing a program or provider, it can help to keep a short checklist in mind. You may want to ask:
- Do they identify as a dual diagnosis or co‑occurring disorders program, with specific expertise in bipolar disorder and substance use?
- Is there on site or closely coordinated psychiatric care for mood stabilization?
- Are therapies like CBT, DBT, Integrated Group Therapy, or other evidence based approaches part of the core program, not just optional add ons?
- Do they use trauma informed care, recognizing how past abuse or neglect can influence both mood and substance use [4]?
- Is there a clear plan for aftercare, including ongoing medication management, therapy, and support groups?
If you already have a therapist or psychiatrist you trust, you can also involve them when evaluating programs or adjusting your plan.
Moving forward with integrated support
Living with bipolar disorder and a substance use disorder can feel isolating, especially when episodes and cravings pull you in opposite directions. Yet the research is clear. You are not an outlier. Co‑occurring bipolar disorder and addiction are common, biologically and psychologically intertwined, and fully appropriate targets for comprehensive, integrated care.
When you pursue treatment for bipolar disorder and substance use, you are not just working on sobriety or mood in isolation. You are building a coordinated plan that includes mood stabilizing medication, addiction pharmacotherapy when appropriate, evidence based therapies, and structured support for daily routines.
You do not have to solve it all at once. The next step might be as simple as talking with a provider about bipolar and substance abuse, asking direct questions about their experience with bipolar and alcohol addiction or bipolar and drug addiction, and exploring integrated options. With the right oversight and structure, it is possible to reduce episodes, decrease substance use, and create more stability in your daily life.






