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Mood stabilizer: a plain-language definition
A mood stabilizer is a medication that prevents or reduces mood episodes in bipolar spectrum conditions, evening out both the highs and the lows. Lithium and lamotrigine are common examples.
Medically reviewed by Shariq Refai, MD, MBA, FAPA, board certified psychiatrist · Last reviewed June 8, 2026 · Editorial policy
Definition
What mood stabilizer means
A mood stabilizer is a medication used to even out the mood swings of bipolar spectrum conditions, reducing both manic or hypomanic highs and depressive lows and preventing future episodes. The category includes lithium, which has the longest track record, and several anticonvulsant medications used in psychiatry, such as lamotrigine and valproate. Some atypical antipsychotics also have mood-stabilizing properties and are used for the same purpose.
In practice different mood stabilizers do somewhat different work. Lithium has strong evidence for preventing both poles and is notable for reducing suicide risk in bipolar disorder. Lamotrigine is particularly useful for preventing the depressive episodes that often dominate bipolar II. The choice depends on which pole is the bigger problem, the person's medical history, and tolerability. Several mood stabilizers, including lithium, need periodic blood tests to keep the dose in a safe range.
This matters because mood stabilizers are the foundation of treating bipolar disorder and cyclothymia, both during acute episodes and as long-term maintenance to prevent relapse. Getting the diagnosis right is what makes them appropriate, since they are used in place of, or carefully alongside, antidepressants that could otherwise destabilize mood. None of these are controlled substances, so they can be prescribed through telepsychiatry with proper monitoring.
A common misconception is that a mood stabilizer simply flattens emotion or dulls a person. The aim is the opposite, restoring a normal, responsive mood, or euthymia, rather than trading one extreme for numbness. Another misread is treating all mood stabilizers as interchangeable. They differ meaningfully in which episodes they prevent and in their monitoring needs, which is why selection is individualized.
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Frequently asked questions
Good questions, clear answers
Is a mood stabilizer the same as an antidepressant?
No. Antidepressants treat depression and anxiety, while mood stabilizers even out the highs and lows of bipolar spectrum conditions. In bipolar disorder, antidepressants are used cautiously because they can sometimes trigger mania.
Are mood stabilizers the same as atypical antipsychotics?
They overlap in use. Some atypical antipsychotics have mood-stabilizing effects and treat bipolar disorder, but traditional mood stabilizers like lithium and lamotrigine are a separate class. A clinician may use either or both.
Do mood stabilizers flatten your emotions?
That is not the goal. Mood stabilizers aim to restore a normal, responsive mood, not to numb feeling. Dosing is adjusted to even out episodes while keeping emotional range intact.
Sources
Sources and further reading
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