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Postpartum psychosis
Other namespuerperal psychosis
Figure 1. Incidence of Psychoses among Swedish First-Time Mothers.png
Rates of psychoses among Swedish first-time mothers
SpecialtyPsychiatry Edit this on Wikidata
SymptomsHallucinations, delusions, mood swings, confusion, restlessness, personality changes
CausesGenetic and environmental
Risk factorsFamily history, bipolar disorder, schizophrenia, difficult pregnancy
TreatmentAnti-psychotics, mood stabilizers , anti-depressants

Early in the history of medicine, it was recognized that severe mental illness sometimes started abruptly in the days after childbirth, later known as puerperal or postpartum psychosis. Gradually, it became clear that this was not a single and unique entity, but a group of at least twenty distinct disorders.

Psychosis implies the presence of manic symptoms, stupor or catatonia, perplexity, confusion, disorders of the will and self, delusions and/ or hallucinations. Psychiatric disorders that lack these symptoms are excluded; depression, however severe, is not included, unless there are psychotic features.

Of this group of psychoses, postpartum bipolar disorder is overwhelmingly the most common in high-income nations.

Postpartum Bipolar disorder