Bipolar Psychiatrist Serving New Haven, CT

If you're in New Haven — maybe a student at Yale or Southern, maybe a few years out of school trying to figure out why your twenties feel so unsteady — and you've recently been told you might have bipolar disorder, it's okay to feel overwhelmed by that. It's a big word. It carries a lot of baggage from movies and headlines that get it wrong. But here's what's actually true: a bipolar diagnosis, when it's the right one, gives you a framework. It explains the patterns. And it opens the door to treatment that actually fits what's been happening. Sindhia Shyras, APRN has nine years of experience working with people at exactly this point — the first real evaluation, the first honest conversation — and she sees New Haven patients through telehealth across Connecticut.

Bipolar I vs. Bipolar II — There's a Real Difference

These aren't just a ranking system. They describe genuinely different experiences. Bipolar I involves full manic episodes — periods of elevated or irritable mood lasting at least a week, often requiring hospitalization, sometimes involving psychosis. Bipolar II is more common and often goes longer without a diagnosis because the highs — called hypomania — aren't as dramatic. Hypomania can look like: you're sharper than usual, you don't need as much sleep, you're running on all cylinders, you're maybe spending a little more than you should or texting people at 2 a.m. It feels productive. It doesn't feel like a symptom. But it's followed by depressions that are just as real and often longer. Bipolar II is not a "milder" version — in many ways the depressive burden is heavier because the high periods aren't obvious enough to prompt help.

When It Starts Young — What That First Episode Looks Like

Bipolar disorder often emerges in late adolescence or early adulthood. For New Haven students and young professionals, that can mean a first major episode hitting during finals, during a pivotal year at work, in a relationship that's already under strain. The depression piece gets labeled as burnout or anxiety. The hypomanic stretch gets labeled as finally hitting your stride. Neither one gets flagged. By the time you're sitting across from a clinician, you might have years of this pattern in the rearview mirror without recognizing what it was. Sindhia asks about all of it — not just what's happening right now.

Bipolar Psychiatrist Serving New Haven CT

Getting a Diagnosis Doesn't Mean Your Life Stops

There's a fear that goes with a new bipolar diagnosis — that it changes what you can do, who you are, what your future looks like. But that fear is usually bigger than the reality. A lot of people with bipolar disorder hold demanding careers, meaningful relationships, rich lives. What changes with the right treatment isn't your capacity. It's the unpredictability that made it so hard to plan anything. Sindhia's approach is practical and direct — what's happening, what are your goals, and what treatment looks like given both of those things. She sees New Haven patients by telehealth and accepts Aetna, Cigna, Husky Health, Medicaid, United Healthcare, Anthem, ConnectiCare, and self-pay.

Frequently Asked Questions

First — take a breath. A diagnosis is information, not a verdict. What comes next is a real conversation about what type of bipolar it is, what treatment options make sense for your situation, and what to watch for going forward. Sindhia will walk you through all of it. You won't leave the first appointment with a bunch of unanswered questions and a prescription — she makes sure you understand the plan.

Clinically, bipolar depression is part of a cycle — there have been or will be elevated periods too. That matters because treatment is different. Antidepressants used alone in bipolar disorder can trigger a manic or hypomanic episode in some people, which is why getting the full picture right from the start really changes the approach. If there's any history of elevated periods, even ones that felt like "good times," that's worth talking about with Sindhia.

Yes. Sindhia sees Connecticut patients statewide through telehealth, so you don't need to come into New Britain for your appointments. All you need is a phone or computer and a private space. Call 860-515-8689 or book online to get started.

You deserve a diagnosis that actually fits.

Sindhia Shyras works with New Haven patients by telehealth and brings nine years of psychiatric experience to every evaluation. Call 860-515-8689 or book online.

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