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Cyclothymia: a plain-language definition

Cyclothymia is a chronic, milder form of mood cycling in which hypomanic and depressive symptoms shift back and forth for at least two years without ever reaching the threshold for a full episode.

Medically reviewed by Shariq Refai, MD, MBA, FAPA, board certified psychiatrist · Last reviewed June 8, 2026 · Editorial policy

Definition

What cyclothymia means

Cyclothymia, or cyclothymic disorder, is a mood condition on the bipolar spectrum. For at least two years in adults, a person has many periods of hypomanic symptoms and many periods of depressive symptoms, but neither ever rises to the level of a full hypomanic episode or a major depressive episode. The symptoms are present more than half the time, and the person is rarely free of them for more than two months at a stretch.

In practice cyclothymia can be hard to spot because no single episode looks dramatic. The pattern is the diagnosis. Someone might describe years of feeling up and down, energetic and confident one stretch, flat and discouraged the next, without ever being hospitalized or fully incapacitated. Friends may read it as a moody or intense temperament rather than a treatable condition. The chronic, low-grade nature is what wears on relationships and work over time.

This matters because cyclothymia is part of the bipolar family, and recognizing it changes treatment. Mood stabilizers are often more appropriate than antidepressants alone, since antidepressants used without a stabilizer can sometimes worsen cycling. Psychoeducation and mood tracking help a person see the pattern and respond earlier. A meaningful share of people with cyclothymia eventually develop bipolar I or II, so monitoring over time is part of good care.

A common misconception is that cyclothymia is just a personality quirk or a milder problem not worth treating. It is a recognized DSM-5-TR diagnosis, and its chronic course can be genuinely impairing. Another misread is confusing it with everyday mood swings. The difference is duration and persistence: cyclothymia is a sustained pattern measured in years, not a reaction that passes in a day.

Frequently asked questions

Good questions, clear answers

Is cyclothymia the same as bipolar disorder?

It is on the bipolar spectrum but is distinct. Cyclothymia involves milder hypomanic and depressive symptoms that never reach full episode criteria. Some people with cyclothymia later develop bipolar I or II.

Is cyclothymia just having mood swings?

No. Everyday mood swings pass within hours or a day. Cyclothymia is a sustained pattern lasting at least two years, with symptoms present more than half the time and few symptom-free stretches.

Can cyclothymia be treated?

Yes. Mood stabilizers, psychoeducation, and mood tracking help many people. Because antidepressants alone can sometimes worsen cycling, treatment is planned with the bipolar spectrum in mind.

Medical Disclaimer: This content is provided for general educational and informational purposes only. It is not medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Reading this content does not create a doctor-patient relationship with shrinkMD, Dr. Shariq Refai, or any affiliated clinician. Always seek the advice of a qualified healthcare professional regarding questions about a medical or mental health condition. Never disregard professional medical advice or delay seeking care because of something you have read on this website. If you are experiencing a medical or mental health emergency, call 911 or go to the nearest emergency room.

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