mania - meaning and definition. What is mania
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What (who) is mania - definition

STATE OF ABNORMALLY ELEVATED OR IRRITABLE MOOD, AROUSAL, AND/OR ENERGY LEVELS
Manic episode; Maniacal; Manic disorder; Antimanic agents; Manic Episodes; Manic episodes; Manic Episode; Manic state; Maniacally; Euphoric mania; Organic manic disorder; Manic excitement

mania         
n. a mania for
mania         
(manias)
1.
If you say that a person or group has a mania for something, you mean that they enjoy it very much or spend a lot of time on it.
It seemed to some observers that the English had a mania for travelling...
...Mozart mania.
N-COUNT: usu sing, oft N for n/-ing, n N
2.
Mania is a mental illness which causes the sufferer to become very worried or concerned about something.
...the treatment of mania...
N-UNCOUNT: also N in pl
mania         
n.
1.
Madness, insanity, violent derangement, lunacy, aberration, delirium, frenzy, dementia.
2.
Vehement desire.

Wikipedia

Mania

Mania, also known as manic syndrome, is a mental and behavioral disorder defined as a state of abnormally elevated arousal, affect, and energy level, or "a state of heightened overall activation with enhanced affective expression together with lability of affect." During a manic episode, an individual will experience rapidly changing emotions and moods, highly influenced by surrounding stimuli. Although mania is often conceived as a "mirror image" to depression, the heightened mood can be either euphoric or dysphoric. As the mania intensifies, irritability can be more pronounced and result in anxiety or anger.

The symptoms of mania include elevated mood (either euphoric or irritable), flight of ideas and pressure of speech, increased energy, decreased need and desire for sleep, and hyperactivity. They are most plainly evident in fully developed hypomanic states. However, in full-blown mania, these symptoms become progressively exacerbated. In severe manic episodes, these symptoms may be obscured by other signs and symptoms characteristic of psychosis, such as delusions, hallucinations, fragmentation of behavior, and catatonia.

Examples of use of mania
1. The new alpha–mania may be the market‘s latest folly.
2. Now it‘s a mania, a commercially–driven obsession.
3. Some would say that Wiggles mania has reached fever pitch.
4. Catalogue mania is not one of the more glamorous addictions.
5. Witness the iPod, and, more recently, the mania over the iPhone.