Title: Psychiatric manifestation of cerebrovascular stroke
1Psychiatric manifestation of
cerebrovascular stroke
- Presented by
- Dr Islam shaaban
- MD of psychiatry
2Introduction
- Both neurology and psychiatry deal with diseases
of the same organ (the brain). - Mental disorders and Stroke have a bidirectional
relationship, as not only are patients with
stroke at greater risk of developing mental
disorders , but patients with mental disorders
have a greater risk of developing a stroke, even
after controlling for other risk factors.
(patients with depression have a two-fold greater
risk of developing a stroke).
3Introduction
- Psychological definition
- A stroke is a sudden traumatic major life event
that usually occurs with minimal warning and
results in life-changing consequences (Donnellan
et al., 2006) - Were not just legs and arms and a mouthwe are
human beings with a mixture of emotions. All
these feelingsself esteem, confidence, identity
theyre under attack after a stroke.
4Impact of stroke on self others
- Physical
- Sensory
- Communication
- Cognitive
- Behavioural
- Emotional
5Impact of stroke on self others
- They affect many levels -
- Personal
- Sense of self
- Identity
- Family
- Role change
- Work
- Responsibilities
- Finance
- Society
- Stigma
- Social networks
- Health services
- Physical
- Sensory
- Communication
- Cognitive
- Behavioural
- Emotional
6The prevalence rates and types of psychiatric
disorders after stroke
- Depression (PSD) common 30 50
- The occurrence of PSD peaks three to six months
after a stroke. - Approximately 20 of patients who have a stroke
meet criteria for major depressive disorder
another 20 meet criteria for minor depression
7The prevalence rates and types of psychiatric
disorders after stroke
- Cognitive impairment
- Delirium occurs in 30 to 40 of patients during
the first week after a stroke, especially after a
hemorrhagic stroke. - Dementia is common following stroke, occurring in
approximately 25 of patients at 3 months after
stroke (vascular dementia ). -
8The prevalence rates of common types of
psychiatric disorders after stroke
- Anxiety is common in ischemic stroke, frequently
present with PSD - Between 30-49 up to 12 years post stroke
- Phobias, generalised anxiety, panic
- PTSD 20 (Flashbacks, avoidance, hyperarousal)
- Catastrophic reaction 20
- Emotional Incontinence
- common in patients with frontal lobe lesions
due to traumatic brain injury, multiple
sclerosis, pseudobulbar palsy - Apathy 20
- Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder
- reported after strokes, affecting the basal
ganglia or brainstem - Bipolar disorder rare
- Psychosis rare approximately 1mostly after
lesions of the brain stem . - sexual dysfunction sexual intercourse does not
increase risk for stroke.
9The Impact of mental disorders on the course of
the stroke
- Delayed psychological intervention can lead to
- Higher rates of mortality
- Increased disability
- Secondary health problems(diabetes ,dyslipidemia,
dyscoagulation and hypertension) - Secondary psychiatric problems (e.g. Depression,
Health / or Social anxiety, Panic Disorder
-agoraphobia) - Suicide
- Hospital readmission
- Higher utilisation of outpatient services
10The Mechanisms of the effect of mental disorders
on stroke
- There are potential mechanisms to explain the
relationship between mental disorders and
cerebrovascular mortality and morbidity - Behavioral mechanisms
- Physiological mechanisms
- Others as side effects of psychotropic drugs
11Behavioral mechanisms
- Poor concentration and adherence to medication
regimens. - Lack of motivation to adhere to lifestyle changes
(e g good diet, exercise). - Increased prevalence of habits with negative
health consequences (e.g., smoking.
binge-eating). - Reduced activity and social isolation/anxiety
making it more difficult to participate in
rehabilitation programs
12Physiological mechanisms
- Hyperactivity of the HPA axis, results in
elevated catecholamine secretion with adverse
effects on the heart, blood vessels and
platelets. - Augmented platelet responsiveness or activation,
increasing the risk of clot formation and
atherosclerosis. - Disrupted circadian rhythms and reduced heart
rate , leading to arrhythmogenesis.
13Side effects of psychotropic drugs
- Low-potency conventional antipsychotics (e.g.,
chlorpormazine) and atypical antipsychotics,
quetiapine, olanzapine and clozapine, are
associated with higher risk of hyperlipidemia - Arrhythmogenic and hypotensive effects of TCAs in
cardiac patients - Recent controlled studies suggest that
antipsychotics can impair glucose regulation by
decreasing insulin action, and inducing weight
gain.
14Mental disorders and Smoking
- patients with current psychiatric disorders have
significantly higher rates of smoking (51 on
average) were - 88 for schizophrenia,
- 70 for mania,
- 49 for major depression,
- 47 for anxiety disorders,
- 46 for personality disorders,
- and 45 for adjustment disorders.
-
15Correlation between lesion location and
neuropsychiatric manifestation
- Gerstmann's syndrome, manifested by dyscalculia,
finger agnosia, left-right disorientation, and
dysgraphia, is a classic manifestation of left
parietal lesions, although it is rarely seen in
its full form - frontal lesion can disrupt usual frontal
functions. Difficulties with executive function,
disinhibition, and apathy are possible
manifestations. - If the lesion is left temporoparietal, it may
affect Wernicke's area and result in an aphasia. - patients with anxiety and mania more often have
right-hemispheric lesions - the left frontal cortex and left basal ganglia
lesions are most often associated with the
poststroke depression.
16Clinical presentation
- Mental Disorders may be the first presentation
of cerebrovascular stroke as vascular depression,
behavioral changes and psychotic features - Some patients with conversion disorder present
with acute onset of neurological symptoms, they
may be misdiagnosed as having transient ischemic
attacks or strokes. - So we must differentiate between mental Disorders
and psychiatric manifestation of cerebrovascular
stroke
17Features That Point to a psychiatric
manifestation of cerebrovascular stroke
- Atypical features ( History )
- Atypical onset (within hours or minutes,
- Atypical age of Onset
- Atypical clinical course.
- Atypical response to treatment.
- Atypical disturbances of perception (non auditory
hallucination) - Catatonia
- Neurological symptoms
- loss of consciousness
- urine / stool incontinence
- seizures
- head injury
- change in headache pattern
18Features That Point to a psychiatric
manifestation of cerebrovascular stroke
- Family history
- Complete lack of positive family history of the
disorder - Past history
- Association of Significant Injury
- Medical illness
- Substance abuse
19Vascular depression (silent stroke)
- patients with vascular depression are more likely
to present with the following criteria - late-onset symptoms of depression.
- Clinical and/or neuroradiological evidence of
diffuse bilateral white matter lesion or small
vessel disease. - Chronic cerebrovaseular risk factors (CVRF) such
as hypertension, diabetes, carotid stenosis,
atrial fibrillation and hyper-lipidaemia.
20Vascular depression
- The symptoms of vascular depression consist of
mood abnormalities, neuropsychological
disturbances as impairment of executive
functions, a greater tendency to psychomotor
retardation, poor insight and impaired activities
of daily living - patients with PSD are more likely to present with
catastrophic reactions, hyper activity, and
diurnal mood variation than patients with
idiopathic depression, - Duration of PSD symptoms appears to depend on the
vascular branch of the stroke, longer durations
identified in patients with a stroke in the
middle cerebral artery, than in the posterior
circulation.
21Potential pathogenic mechanisms for post-stroke
depression
- Many risk factors associated with PSD have
included location and size of the stroke, there
is relation between PSD and stroke of temporal
lobe, and the size of the ventricles. - There is a relationship between PSD and left
hemispheric stroke specially left frontal
dorsolateral cortical regions and basal ganglia.
- depression appear more than one year after the
stroke , right-sided lesions are more frequent. - There is significant correlation between the
severity of disability and depression,
22Impact of post-stroke depression on the course of
the stroke
- The presence of PSD has been found to have a
negative impact on - recovery of cognitive function
- recovery of ability to perform ADL
- mortality risks.
- in recent study of 976 stroke patients followed
for one year, those with PSD had 50 higher
mortality than those without.
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24Management
- There are many similarities in diagnosing and
treating mental Disorders in the stroke and
primary mental disorders ,Selective serotonin
reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs), tricyclic
antidepressants (TCAs), stimulants, and
electroconvulsive therapy (ECT) have all been
effective in the treatment of poststroke
depression - Antidepressants have been used as prophylaxis to
prevent PSD, physical impairment and mortality - Avoid antidepressants that interact with the
medical illness, e.g.. arrhythmogenic and
hypotensive effects of TCAs in cardiac patients
25Management
- Avoid antidepressants with side effects that may
worsen symptoms of the medical illness, e.g..
venlafaxine in hypertension, mirtazapine or TCAs
in diabetes - Avoid psychotropic drugs that may interact with
other drugs that patients may be using for the
medical illness, e.g., fluvoxamine with warfarin,
fluoxetine and paroxetine with codeine TCAs with
quinidine - Be aware of age-and illness-related changes in
pharmacokinetics, e.g., liver disease and hepatic
dysfunction may reduce metabolism and increase
serum levels of psychotropic drugs -
26Management
- 'Start low, go slow, keep going, stay longer'
start with lower than usual doses, titrate up
slowly to usual therapeutic doses, and maintain
on medications for a longer duration. - relapse with discontinuation of psychotropic
drugs is very common so maintenance treatment of
two year or longer is recommended - ECT was found useful in many retrospective
studies. None of the pts developed exacerbations
of stroke or new neurological deficits.
27Conclusion
- No health without mental health
- Depression anxiety are the most common
post-stroke syndromes. - Both depression and anxiety increase morbidity
and delay rehabilitation. - There are very few treatment studies available.
- we must treat post-stroke psychiatric disorders
as early as possible to improve outcome and
quality of life.
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