RESUMO
OBJECTIVE: Postictal psychiatric symptoms (PPS) are a relatively common but understudied phenomenon in epilepsy. The mechanisms by which seizures contribute to worsening in psychiatric symptoms are unclear. We aimed to identify PPS prospectively during and after admission to the epilepsy monitoring unit (EMU) in order to characterize the postictal physiologic changes leading to PPS. METHODS: We prospectively enrolled patients admitted to the EMU and administered repeat psychometric questionnaires during and after their hospital stay in order to assess for postictal exacerbations in four symptom complexes: anger/hostility, anxiety, depression, and paranoia. Electroclinical and electrographic seizures were identified from the EEG recordings, and seizure durations were measured. The severity of postictal slowing was calculated as the proportion of postictal theta/delta activity in the postictal EEG relative to the preictal EEG using the Hilbert transform. RESULTS: Among 33 participants, 8 demonstrated significant increases in at least one of the four symptoms (the PPS+ group) within three days following the first seizure. The most common PPS was anger/hostility, experienced by 7/8 participants with PPS. Among the 8 PPS+ participants, four experienced more than one PPS. As compared to those without PPS (the PPS- group), the PPS+ group demonstrated a greater degree of postictal EEG slowing at 10 min (p = 0.022) and 20 min (p = 0.05) following seizure termination. They also experienced significantly more seizures during the study period (p = 0.005). There was no difference in seizure duration between groups. SIGNIFICANCE: Postictal psychiatric symptoms including anger/hostility, anxiety, depression, and paranoia may be more common than recognized. In particular, postictal increases in anger and irritability may be particularly common. We provide physiological evidence of a biological mechanism as well as a demonstration of the use of quantitative electroencephalography toward a better understanding of postictal neurophysiology.
Assuntos
Eletroencefalografia , Convulsões , Humanos , Masculino , Feminino , Adulto , Pessoa de Meia-Idade , Convulsões/fisiopatologia , Convulsões/psicologia , Adulto Jovem , Estudos Prospectivos , Inquéritos e Questionários , Ansiedade/fisiopatologia , Epilepsia/fisiopatologia , Epilepsia/psicologia , Epilepsia/complicações , Transtornos Mentais/fisiopatologia , Escalas de Graduação Psiquiátrica , Transtornos Paranoides/fisiopatologia , Transtornos Paranoides/psicologia , Depressão/fisiopatologia , Depressão/etiologia , Psicometria , IdosoRESUMO
The mechanism of symptom amplification, developed in the study of somatization, may be helpful in caring for patients with symptoms that, while they have a demonstrable medical basis, are nonetheless disproportionately severe and distressing. Amplified medical symptoms are marked by disproportionate physical suffering, unduly negative thoughts and concerns about them, and elevated levels of health-related anxiety. They are accompanied by extensive and sustained illness behaviors, disproportionate difficulty compartmentalizing them and circumscribing their impact, and consequent problems and dissatisfaction with their medical care. A distinction has long been made between "medically explained" and "medically unexplained" symptoms. However, a more comprehensive view of symptom phenomenology undermines this distinction and places all symptoms along a smooth continuum regardless of cause: Recent findings in cognitive neuroscience suggest that all symptoms-regardless of origin-are processed through convergent pathways. The complete conscious experience of both medically "explained" and "unexplained" symptoms is an amalgam of a viscerosomatic sensation fused with its ascribed salience and the patient's ideas, expectations, and concerns about the sensation. This emerging empirical evidence furnishes a basis for viewing persistent, disproportionately distressing symptoms of demonstrable disease along a continuum with medically unexplained symptoms. Thus, therapeutic modalities developed for somatization and medically unexplained symptoms can be helpful in the care of seriously ill medical patients with amplified symptoms. These interventions include educational groups for coping with chronic illness, cognitive therapies for dysfunctional thoughts, behavioral strategies for maladaptive illness behaviors, psychotherapy for associated emotional distress, and consultation with mental health professionals to assist the primary care physician with difficulties in medical management.
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Sintomas Inexplicáveis , Transtornos Somatoformes , Humanos , Transtornos Somatoformes/diagnóstico , Transtornos Somatoformes/terapia , Transtornos Somatoformes/psicologia , Transtornos de Ansiedade/terapia , Ansiedade , PsicoterapiaRESUMO
Dividing the brain-mind into the specialized fields of neurology and psychiatry has produced many granular advantages, but these silos have imposed barriers to comprehensively understanding and contextualizing the fundamentals governing mental life and its maladies. Scientific inquiry into these fundamentals cannot reach its full potential without interdigitating the boundaries of two specialties of the same organ for both scholarship and clinical practice. We propose that to truly integrate disorders of the brain and the mind for research and clinical care, we must carefully reexamine the classification of its disorders (nosology) as an instrument to develop a coherent pathological and psychological framework. We call on professional organizations from neurology, psychiatry, behavioral neurology, neuropsychiatry, neuropsychology, and other relevant subspecialties (eg, geriatric psychiatry) to convene a multidisciplinary task force to define the current classification principles of their subspecialties and work toward developing an integrated nosology. The effect of a shared classification system, which we acknowledge is a difficult proposition philosophically and politically, would have transformative potential across educational, clinical, scientific, programmatic, and sociocultural realms. If accomplished, this initiative would provide a definitive step toward reducing stigma (and promoting reimbursement parity) for the full spectrum of complex brain disorders (regardless of traditional neurologic vs psychiatric conceptualizations).
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Encefalopatias , Transtornos Mentais , Neurologia , Neurociências , Humanos , Idoso , Transtornos Mentais/diagnóstico , EncéfaloRESUMO
This study investigated predictors of involuntary and voluntary memories of stressful virtual reality scenarios. Thirty-two veterans of the two Persian Gulf Wars completed verbal memory tests and diagnostic assessments. They were randomly assigned to a Recounting (16) or a Suppression (16) condition. After immersion in the VR scenarios, the Recounting group described the scenarios and the Suppression group suppressed thoughts of the scenarios. One week later, participants completed surprise voluntary memory tests and another thought suppression task. The best predictors of voluntary memory were verbal memory ability, dissociation, and to a lesser extent, physiological arousal before and after scenarios. Dissociation and physiological stress responses selectively affected memory for neutral elements. Higher distress during scenarios impaired voluntary memory but increased the frequency of involuntary memories. Physiological stress responses promoted more frequent involuntary memories immediately after the scenarios. More frequent initial involuntary memories, tonic physiological arousal, and stronger emotional responses to dangerous events predicted difficulty inhibiting involuntary memories at follow-up. The effects of thought suppression were transient and weaker than those of other variables. The findings suggest that posttraumatic amnesia and involuntary memories of adverse events are more related to memory ability and emotional and physiological stress responses than to post-exposure suppression.
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Emoções , Memória Episódica , Rememoração Mental , Transtornos de Estresse Pós-Traumáticos/psicologia , Veteranos/psicologia , Realidade Virtual , Adulto , Feminino , Humanos , Masculino , Pessoa de Meia-Idade , Adulto JovemRESUMO
Major depression, as well as other depressive disorders, is commonly comorbid with other medical illnesses, particularly chronic and systemic medical illnesses. The co-occurrence of the disorders is so common that it challenges our notions of the meaning of comorbidity and our desire to neatly separate psychiatric and medical illnesses. The overlap between symptoms of physical illness and the neurovegetative symptoms of major depression and the initial normative emotional response to physical illness add to the challenge of accurate diagnosis and timely treatment of depression in the medically ill. We review the literature on the comorbidity of depression and the various medical illnesses, including diagnostic and treatment approaches. The differential diagnosis for major depression among medically ill patients should include delirium and medication-induced symptoms. We suggest that major depression itself may be best conceptualized as a systemic illness whose pathophysiology overlaps with other systemic medical illnesses. The initial treatment strategies for major depression in medical illness are like those for the general population; however, the comorbid medical illnesses may interfere with remission. To illustrate these points, we describe a patient with clinical characteristics covered in this review who experienced major depression as well as several chronic illnesses, including hypersensitivity pneumonitis, multiple sclerosis, chronic pain due to degenerative joint disease, and diabetes mellitus.
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Dor Crônica , Comorbidade , Transtorno Depressivo Maior , Diabetes Mellitus , Esclerose Múltipla , Psicoterapia , Dor Crônica/epidemiologia , Dor Crônica/psicologia , Transtorno Depressivo Maior/diagnóstico , Transtorno Depressivo Maior/epidemiologia , Transtorno Depressivo Maior/terapia , Diabetes Mellitus/epidemiologia , Diabetes Mellitus/psicologia , Diagnóstico Diferencial , Feminino , Humanos , Pessoa de Meia-Idade , Esclerose Múltipla/epidemiologia , Esclerose Múltipla/psicologiaRESUMO
Trauma-informed care has emerged as an important model to address the pervasiveness of traumatic experiences across the life cycle and their association with significant adverse medical and psychiatric consequences. To achieve health equity, in which all people have the opportunity for health, it is crucial for physicians to become comfortable with a neurobiopsychosocial understanding of trauma and how to provide optimal trauma-informed care. Given the pervasiveness of trauma exposure, and its impact on individual and community health, this paradigm shift in adult health care delivery systems requires physician engagement at every stage of development and implementation.
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Equidade em Saúde/normas , Política de Saúde/tendências , Desenvolvimento de Programas/métodos , Saúde Pública/normas , HumanosRESUMO
AIMS: Borderline personality disorder (BPD) is characterized by self-regulation deficits, including impulsivity and affective lability. Transference-focused psychotherapy (TFP) is an evidence-based treatment proven to reduce symptoms across multiple cognitive-emotional domains in BPD. This pilot study aimed to investigate neural activation associated with, and predictive of, clinical improvement in emotional and behavioral regulation in BPD following TFP. METHODS: BPD subjects (n = 10) were scanned pre- and post-TFP treatment using a within-subjects design. A disorder-specific emotional-linguistic go/no-go functional magnetic resonance imaging paradigm was used to probe the interaction between negative emotional processing and inhibitory control. RESULTS: Analyses demonstrated significant treatment-related effects with relative increased dorsal prefrontal (dorsal anterior cingulate, dorsolateral prefrontal, and frontopolar cortices) activation, and relative decreased ventrolateral prefrontal cortex and hippocampal activation following treatment. Clinical improvement in constraint correlated positively with relative increased left dorsal anterior cingulate cortex activation. Clinical improvement in affective lability correlated positively with left posterior-medial orbitofrontal cortex/ventral striatum activation, and negatively with right amygdala/parahippocampal activation. Post-treatment improvements in constraint were predicted by pre-treatment right dorsal anterior cingulate cortex hypoactivation, and pre-treatment left posterior-medial orbitofrontal cortex/ventral striatum hypoactivation predicted improvements in affective lability. CONCLUSIONS: These preliminary findings demonstrate potential TFP-associated alterations in frontolimbic circuitry and begin to identify neural mechanisms associated with a psychodynamically oriented psychotherapy.
Assuntos
Transtorno da Personalidade Borderline/psicologia , Transtorno da Personalidade Borderline/terapia , Encéfalo/fisiologia , Emoções , Inibição Psicológica , Psicoterapia , Adulto , Transtorno da Personalidade Borderline/fisiopatologia , Feminino , Humanos , Imageamento por Ressonância Magnética , Neuroimagem , Projetos Piloto , Valor Preditivo dos Testes , Adulto JovemRESUMO
Although somatosensory amplification is theorized to serve a critical role in somatization, it remains poorly understood neurobiologically. In this perspective article, convergent visceral-somatic processing is highlighted, and neuroimaging studies in somatoform disorders are reviewed. Neural correlates of cognitive-affective amplifiers are integrated into a neurocircuit framework for somatosensory amplification. The anterior cingulate cortex, insula, amygdala, hippocampal formation, and striatum are some of the identified regions. Clinical symptomatology in a given patient or group may represent dysfunction in one or more of these neurobehavioral nodes. Somatosensory amplification may, in part, develop through stress-mediated aberrant neuroplastic changes and the neuromodulatory effects of inflammation.
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Rede Nervosa/patologia , Transtornos Somatoformes/patologia , Córtex Somatossensorial/patologia , Mapeamento Encefálico , Feminino , Humanos , Masculino , Transtornos Somatoformes/diagnósticoRESUMO
Chronic pain affects up to 28% of U.S. adults, costing â¼$560 billion each year. Chronic pain is an instantiation of the perennial complexity of how to best assess and treat chronic diseases over time, especially in populations where age, medical comorbidities, and socioeconomic barriers may limit access to care. Chronic disease management poses a particular challenge for the healthcare system's transition from fee-for-service to value and risk-based reimbursement models. Remote, passive real-time data from smartphones could enable more timely interventions and simultaneously manage risk and promote better patient outcomes through predicting and preventing costly adverse outcomes; however, there is limited evidence whether remote monitoring is feasible, especially in the case of older patients with chronic pain. Here, we introduce the Pain Intervention and Digital Research (Pain-IDR) Program as a pilot initiative launched in 2022 that combines outpatient clinical care and digital health research. The Pain-IDR seeks to test whether functional status can be assessed passively, through a smartphone application, in older patients with chronic pain. We discuss two perspectives-a narrative approach that describes the clinical settings and rationale behind changes to the operational design, and a quantitative approach that measures patient recruitment, patient experience, and HERMES data characteristics. Since launch, we have had 77 participants with a mean age of 55.52, of which n = 38 have fully completed the 6 months of data collection necessitated to be considered in the study, with an active data collection rate of 51% and passive data rate of 78%. We further present preliminary operational strategies that we have adopted as we have learned to adapt the Pain-IDR to a productive clinical service. Overall, the Pain-IDR has successfully engaged older patients with chronic pain and presents useful insights for others seeking to implement digital phenotyping in other chronic disease settings.
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Encéfalo , Síndrome de Charles Bonnet , Lobo Frontal/diagnóstico por imagem , Alucinações , Meningioma/diagnóstico por imagem , Neoplasias/diagnóstico por imagem , Cegueira/etiologia , Diagnóstico Diferencial , Feminino , Lobo Frontal/cirurgia , Alucinações/etiologia , Humanos , Meningioma/cirurgia , Pessoa de Meia-Idade , Neoplasias/cirurgia , Nervo ÓpticoRESUMO
Although conversion disorder is closely connected to the origins of neurology and psychiatry, it remains poorly understood. In this article, the authors discuss neural and clinical parallels between lesional unawareness disorders and unilateral motor and somatosensory conversion disorder, emphasizing functional neuroimaging/disease correlates. Authors suggest that a functional-unawareness neurobiological framework, mediated by right hemisphere-lateralized, large-scale brain network dysfunction, may play a significant role in the neurobiology of conversion disorder. The perigenual anterior cingulate and the posterior parietal cortices are detailed as important in disease pathophysiology. Further investigations will refine the functional-unawareness concept, clarify the role of affective circuits, and delineate the process through which functional neurologic symptoms emerge.
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Conscientização/fisiologia , Encéfalo/fisiopatologia , Transtorno Conversivo/fisiopatologia , Neuroimagem Funcional/psicologia , Distúrbios Somatossensoriais/fisiopatologia , Dominância Cerebral/fisiologia , Emoções/fisiologia , Neuroimagem Funcional/métodos , Humanos , Modelos Neurológicos , SíndromeRESUMO
The ability to distinguish between negative, positive and neutral valence is a key part of emotion perception. Emotional valence has conceptual meaning that supersedes any particular type of stimulus, although it is typically captured experimentally in association with particular tasks. We sought to identify neural encoding for task-invariant emotional valence. We evaluated whether high-gamma responses (HGRs) to visually displayed words conveying emotions could be used to decode emotional valence from HGRs to facial expressions. Intracranial electroencephalography was recorded from 14 individuals while they participated in two tasks, one involving reading words with positive, negative, and neutral valence, and the other involving viewing faces with positive, negative, and neutral facial expressions. Quadratic discriminant analysis was used to identify information in the HGR that differentiates the three emotion conditions. A classifier was trained on the emotional valence labels from one task and was cross-validated on data from the same task (within-task classifier) as well as the other task (between-task classifier). Emotional valence could be decoded in the left medial orbitofrontal cortex and middle temporal gyrus, both using within-task classifiers and between-task classifiers. These observations suggest the presence of task-independent emotional valence information in the signals from these regions.
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Emoções , Expressão Facial , Emoções/fisiologia , Humanos , Estimulação Luminosa , Leitura , Lobo TemporalRESUMO
Diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI) have become increasingly recognized as essential to the practice of high-quality patient care delivery and the support of members of the clinical environment. A solid understanding of DEI contributes to a better grasp of what drives health care disparities and yields improved clinical outcomes for minority populations. This column discusses how individuals can practically promote DEI by describing the design and implementation of DEI in an academic psychiatry department. The authors highlight the powerful role of departmental initiatives in establishing best practices for DEI and lessons learned through the work of the psychiatry department's DEI committee.
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Grupos Minoritários , Psiquiatria , Disparidades em Assistência à Saúde , HumanosRESUMO
Pharmaceutical breakthroughs for anxiety have been lackluster in the last half-century. Converging behavior and limbic molecular heterogeneity has the potential to revolutionize biomarker-driven interventions. However, current in vivo models too often deploy artificial systems including directed evolution, mutations and fear induction, which poorly mirror clinical manifestations. Here, we explore transcriptional heterogeneity of the amygdala in isogenic mice using an unbiased multi-dimensional computational approach that segregates intra-cohort reactions to moderate situational adversity and intersects it with high content molecular profiling. We show that while the computational approach stratifies known features of clinical anxiety including nitric oxide, opioid and corticotropin signaling, previously unrecognized druggable biomarkers emerge, such as calpain11 and scand1. Through ingenuity pathway analyses, we further describe a role for neurosteroid estradiol signaling, heat shock proteins, ubiquitin ligases and lipid metabolism. In addition, we report a remarkable behavioral pattern that maps to molecular features of anxiety in mice through counterphobic social attitudes, which manifest as increased, yet spatially distant socialization. These findings provide an unbiased approach for interrogating anxiolytics, and hint toward biomarkers underpinning behavioral and social patterns that merit further exploration.
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Tonsila do Cerebelo , Ansiedade , Comportamento Animal , Modelos Biológicos , Neurociências/métodos , Comportamento Social , Socialização , Transcrição Gênica , Tonsila do Cerebelo/metabolismo , Tonsila do Cerebelo/fisiopatologia , Animais , Ansiedade/genética , Ansiedade/metabolismo , Ansiedade/fisiopatologia , Comportamento Animal/fisiologia , Modelos Animais de Doenças , Feminino , Camundongos , Camundongos Endogâmicos BALB C , Camundongos Endogâmicos C57BL , Camundongos Endogâmicos DBARESUMO
OBJECTIVE: Most of the functional neuroimaging studies of depression have focused primarily on the resting state or responses to negatively valenced stimuli. However, depression consists not only of an accentuation of negative affective processing but of an inability to experience pleasure or positive motivation. The authors tested the hypothesis that depressed subjects would show less activation than healthy comparison subjects, in response to positive stimuli, in ventral striatal regions associated with processing of reward and positive stimuli. METHOD: Positive, negative, and neutral words were presented to 10 unmedicated depressed patients and 12 healthy comparison subjects in the context of a 3T functional magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) paradigm. Image processing and analysis were performed using statistical parametric mapping with a mixed-effects model. Significant differences in neural responses were assessed, examining group, condition, and interaction effects of interest within the context of a general linear model. RESULTS: Relative to comparison subjects, depressed patients demonstrated significantly less bilateral ventral striatal activation to positive stimuli, correlating with decreased interest/pleasure in and performance of activities. They also displayed decreased activation to positive stimuli in a dorsomedial frontal region associated with processing of self-related stimuli. Responses of depressed subjects to negative stimuli were consistent with the growing literature on frontolimbic dysfunction in depression. CONCLUSIONS: This finding 1) supports a pathophysiological model of depression that includes reward/motivational pathway dysfunction, 2) suggests a contributing neural substrate of the inability to experience pleasure or engage in rewarding activities, 3) provides greater specification of abnormalities of basal ganglia function in depression, and 4) may help guide treatment approaches.