During his manic episodes, he feels invincible. He goes out every night. He drinks heavily. He uses cocaine. He spends money he does not have. He sleeps with people he barely knows. He makes business decisions that seem brilliant at 2 AM and catastrophic by morning. During his depressive episodes, he cannot get out of bed. He drinks alone to numb the crushing emptiness. He has tried cannabis because someone told him it would help. It does not. It makes the paranoia worse. He has been diagnosed with bipolar disorder, but his treatment keeps failing because nobody is properly addressing the substance use. He has been through two de-addiction programmes, but both failed because nobody properly managed the bipolar disorder. He is caught in a trap that has a name — dual diagnosis — and a solution that requires treating both conditions at the same time. He has never received that kind of treatment. Most people with this combination never do.
If you or someone you love has bipolar disorder alongside alcohol or drug problems, please read this blog carefully. At Bharosa, we see this combination regularly in our LB Nagar OPD, and we want to explain why it is so common, why it is so destructive, and why treating both together is the only approach that works.
Bipolar disorder has one of the highest rates of co-occurring substance use of any psychiatric condition. Research from the U.S. National Institute of Mental Health (https://www.nimh.nih.gov) and the U.S. National Institute on Drug Abuse (https://nida.nih.gov) consistently shows that between 40 and 60 percent of people with bipolar disorder develop a substance use disorder at some point in their lives. The American Psychiatric Association (https://www.psychiatry.org) identifies this co-occurrence as a major clinical challenge requiring specialised, integrated treatment.
The reasons for this extraordinarily high overlap are biological, psychological, and behavioural. Biologically, the same brain reward circuits that are dysregulated in bipolar disorder are also involved in addiction. Psychologically, the extreme emotional states of bipolar disorder create intense drives toward self-medication. Behaviourally, the impulsivity of mania and the despair of depression both create conditions where substance use becomes more likely.
During manic or hypomanic episodes, a person with bipolar disorder experiences elevated mood, increased energy, reduced need for sleep, grandiosity, impulsivity, and poor judgement. In this state, the normal inhibitions that would prevent someone from drinking excessively or using drugs are dramatically reduced. The person feels great, feels invincible, and feels that consequences do not apply to them. They may spend entire nights drinking, use stimulants to keep the high going, or experiment with drugs they would never consider in a stable state.
The substance use during mania often creates additional problems — financial losses, damaged relationships, legal issues, physical health consequences — that the person then has to face when the episode ends. These consequences can trigger or deepen the depressive episode that follows, creating a cycle of damage that accelerates with each episode.
Some people with bipolar disorder also use substances during mania in an attempt to intensify the high or to sustain it as it begins to fade. Stimulants, in particular, can worsen manic symptoms and push the person into a more severe or more psychotic episode. Alcohol can mask the warning signs of escalating mania, delaying treatment.
During bipolar depressive episodes, the person experiences crushing low mood, loss of interest in everything, fatigue, hopelessness, and often suicidal thoughts. The emotional pain is intense and relentless. Many people turn to alcohol, cannabis, or other depressants to numb this pain. The substance provides temporary relief — a few hours of not feeling the depression — but always makes the depression worse in the longer term.
Alcohol is the most commonly used substance during bipolar depression. It is legal, culturally available, and provides quick (if temporary) numbing. But alcohol is itself a depressant. It worsens depression. It disrupts sleep. It interferes with the effectiveness of mood stabiliser medications. It increases impulsivity and suicidal risk. The person who is drinking to escape depression is, in reality, deepening it with every glass.
Cannabis is often used by people with bipolar depression who believe it will help with mood or sleep. While some people report short-term benefits, research consistently shows that cannabis worsens bipolar disorder outcomes over time, increases the frequency and severity of mood episodes, and is associated with psychotic symptoms in vulnerable individuals.
Here is the central problem. If you go to a psychiatrist for bipolar disorder and do not disclose or address the substance use, the psychiatric treatment will be undermined. Mood stabilisers like lithium and valproate work less well when the person is actively using alcohol or drugs. Antipsychotics are less effective. The person's mood episodes become harder to predict and harder to manage. The psychiatrist may conclude that the medications are not working, when in reality the medications cannot work while the substance use continues.
If you go to a de-addiction programme that does not have expertise in bipolar disorder, the mood disorder will be untreated or undertreated. When the next manic or depressive episode arrives — and it will — the person will be overwhelmed by symptoms that drive them straight back to substance use. Relapse is nearly inevitable when the underlying mood disorder is not properly stabilised.
The only approach that consistently works is integrated treatment. This means a single treatment team that understands and manages both the bipolar disorder and the substance use disorder simultaneously. The same psychiatrist prescribes mood stabilisers and anti-craving medication. The same therapist addresses mood management skills and relapse prevention skills. The treatment plan accounts for how each condition affects the other.
Comprehensive psychiatric assessment that evaluates both the mood disorder (its type, its cycling pattern, its current phase) and the substance use (which substances, how much, how long, what triggers use). Mood stabilisation with appropriate medication — lithium, valproate, lamotrigine, or atypical antipsychotics depending on the presentation. Anti-craving medication where appropriate. Cognitive Behavioural Therapy addressing both mood management and substance use patterns. Psychoeducation about bipolar disorder and about addiction — understanding both conditions is essential for the patient and for the family.
Sleep regulation is particularly important. Both bipolar disorder and substance use disrupt sleep, and sleep disruption is one of the most powerful triggers for mood episodes. Stabilising sleep is often one of the most immediately helpful interventions.
Family involvement is often crucial. Families can learn to recognise the early warning signs of both mood episodes and relapse, and can provide support that is informed by understanding of both conditions. Family therapy can also address the relationship damage that the combination has caused.
Long-term monitoring is essential. Bipolar disorder is a lifelong condition that requires ongoing medication and monitoring. Substance use disorder requires ongoing vigilance. The combination requires both, coordinated by a team that understands the interaction between the two.
At Bharosa, our consultant MD Psychiatrists (/best-psychiatrist-hyderabad-depression) have expertise in both mood disorders and addiction, allowing us to provide genuine integrated treatment at our LB Nagar facility. We assess both conditions from the first visit. We stabilise mood and address substance use simultaneously. We provide Cognitive Behavioural Therapy (/cbt-therapy-hyderabad-bharosa) and psychoeducation that covers both conditions. We involve families (/family-therapy-specialists-in-hyderabad) in understanding the dual nature of the problem. We provide long-term follow-up that monitors both mood stability and sobriety.
Patients who receive integrated treatment often describe it as the first time anything has really worked. The mood episodes become less frequent and less severe. The substance use reduces or stops. The cycle of mania-driven excess and depression-driven numbing begins to break. Life becomes more stable, more predictable, and more liveable than it has been in years. This is what proper dual diagnosis care delivers. If you or your loved one has been bouncing between psychiatric care and de-addiction without success, the missing piece may be integration. It is available in Hyderabad today.
Q: Why is addiction so common in bipolar disorder?
A: The extreme mood states drive self-medication, and shared brain circuits create biological vulnerability.
Q: Can I take mood stabilisers while in addiction treatment?
A: Yes. In fact, mood stabilisation is essential for successful addiction treatment in bipolar patients.
Q: Will sobriety cure my bipolar disorder?
A: No. Bipolar disorder requires its own ongoing treatment. But sobriety makes that treatment much more effective.
Q: Does cannabis help bipolar depression?
A: No. Research shows cannabis worsens bipolar outcomes and increases psychotic risk.
Q: Does Bharosa treat bipolar disorder and addiction together in Hyderabad?
A: Yes. Integrated dual diagnosis care is available at our LB Nagar facility.
Two conditions, one treatment plan. Bharosa integrates what others separate, in Hyderabad. Call +91 95050 58886.

Mental health struggles do not define you, and you don’t have to face them alone. If you notice any early signs of mental health disorders in yourself or a family member, take the first step today.