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Query: UMLS:C0038454 (
stroke
)
147,016
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Middle cerebral artery ligation in the rat produces decreases in catecholamine concentrations at brain sites uninjured by ischemic damage and a transient increase in spontaneous horizontal activity. Development of this hyperactivity can be blocked by postoperative treatment with the antidepressant, desmethylimipramine, or by preoperative destruction of norepinephrine terminals with 6-hydroxydopamine. These results suggest that ischemic damage to the cerebral cortex which injures some axonal branches of elaborately arborizing catecholamine-containing neurons may alter the biochemical and functional state of the entire system in its intact collateral axons. Thus the concept of
stroke
as a local injury producing symptoms by local structure-function relationships is conceptually inadequate, and poststroke symptoms must be evaluated with these "whole brain" concepts in mind. We suggest that the poststroke symptoms of
apathy
and depression may represent emotional changes which result from pathophysiological processes in catecholamine neurons far from the site of the
stroke
.
...
PMID:Pharmacological treatment following experimental cerebral infarction: implications for understanding psychological symptoms of human stroke. 58 47
A sample of persons with a single ischemic cerebral
stroke
was used to elucidate and quantify the
indifference
associated with right hemisphere
stroke
. Seven persons with right hemisphere
stroke
were compared with 10 persons with left hemisphere
stroke
on two aspects of
indifference
(social
indifference
and lack of anxiety). Persons with right hemisphere
stroke
reported themselves as being substantially less anxious (p = .025) and somewhat more socially indifferent (p = .081) than did those with left hemisphere
stroke
. Lack of appropriate anxiety may contribute to the clinical descriptions of
indifference
, failure to make expected recovery, and difficulty in relationships with others.
...
PMID:Self-report of indifference and anxiety among persons with right hemisphere stroke. 152 18
This article presents evidence for the reliability and construct validity of the
Apathy
Evaluation Scale (AES). Conceptually,
apathy
is defined as lack of motivation not attributable to diminished level of consciousness, cognitive impairment, or emotional distress. Operationally, the AES treats
apathy
as a psychological dimension defined by simultaneous deficits in the overt behavioral, cognitive, and emotional concomitants of goal-directed behavior. Three versions of the AES (clinician, informant, and self-rated) were evaluated for 123 subjects, ages 53-85, meeting research criteria for right or left hemisphere
stroke
, probable Alzheimer's disease, major depression, or well elderly control. Multiple forms of reliability (internal consistency, test-retest, and interrater) were satisfactory. Several types of validity evidence are presented for each version of the scale, including the following: ability of the AES to discriminate between groups according to mean levels of
apathy
, discriminability of
apathy
ratings from standard measures of depression and anxiety, convergent validity between the three versions of the scale, and predictive validity measures derived from observing subjects' play with novelty toys and videogames. Guidelines for the administration of the AES are presented, along with suggestions for potential applications of the scale to clinical and research questions.
...
PMID:Reliability and validity of the Apathy Evaluation Scale. 175 29
An unselected community sample of 128 patients were studied over the 12 months after their first
stroke
, and compared with a control sample of subjects from the general population. Psychiatric status was assessed using the PSE and BDI. Symptoms of mood disorder were commoner in the
stroke
patients than the controls, but the differences were not substantial and had largely disappeared by 12 months. Psychiatric problems encountered included agoraphobia, social withdrawal,
apathy
and self-neglect, irritability and pathological emotionalism. While there was a high cumulative incidence of psychiatric disorder, little of it persisted: only two cases of major depression were present for the whole 12 months. We believe undue emphasis has been placed in the recent literature on major depression as a specific syndrome following
stroke
.
...
PMID:Mood disorders in the year after first stroke. 201 56
The paramedian diencephalic syndrome is characterized by a clinical triad: hypersomnolent
apathy
, amnesic syndrome, and impaired vertical gaze. We studied 4 cases with computed tomography evidence of bilateral diencephalic infarctions. Each case began abruptly with hypersomnolent
apathy
followed by fluctuations from appropriate affect, full orientation, and alertness to labile mood, confabulation, and
apathy
. Speech varied from hypophonia to normal; handwriting varied from legible script to gross scrawl. Psychological testing revealed poor learning and recall, with low performance scores. In 3 patients the predominant abnormality was in downward gaze.
Stroke
PMID:The paramedian diencephalic syndrome: a dynamic phenomenon. 356 93
A double-blind, placebo-controlled clinical study of the efficacy and safety of buflomedil in the treatment of dementia was conducted in 55 patients. A statistically significant improvement was achieved for such characteristics as mood, self-care, alertness, emotional lability,
indifference
, hostility, and anxiety. Compared with placebo, buflomedil showed a clear superiority with regard to improvement in cognitive dysfunction and psychosomatic dysfunction, with a trend toward statistical significance in improvement in interpersonal relations. Secondary analysis of a subset of patients without evidence of earlier
cerebrovascular accident
showed similar clinical responses and statistical findings. Buflomedil was well tolerated.
...
PMID:Effect of buflomedil on behaviour, memory, and intellectual capacity in patients with dementia. A placebo-controlled study. 389 13
Neurobehavioral sequelae of strokes can limit a patient's ability to describe or express emotion, can cause him to give "yes" answers to the clinician who expects them, or can directly cause
apathy
or crying spells. Also, anosognosia for depressive signs can cause the patient to deny depressive signs that are objectively observable. These diagnostic confounders have not been adequately assessed in previous research on poststroke depression; thus many studies are of doubtful validity, as shown by studies of the dexamethasone suppression test for melancholia in
stroke
patients. Future studies on depression after
stroke
must prospectively rule out fluent aphasia, motor aprosody, and amnesia before relying on diagnostic information from the psychiatric interview, and the interview should always be supplemented by direct observation of vegetative signs and other behavior. With this extended information, major depression can and should be diagnosed using accepted symptom and duration criteria.
...
PMID:Diagnosing depression after stroke. 759 71
The mechanisms of dementia resulting from small deep infarctions are incompletely understood. The thesis underlying the concept of "multi-infarct dementia" is that multiple lesions have a synergistic effect on mental functions, resulting in dementia irrespective of specific location or volume. In this report, we summarize our experience with six patients reported previously along with additional patients examined subsequently, whose clinical features and brain imaging findings allow an alternative formulation for dementia resulting from lacunar
stroke
. The six initial patients presented with an abrupt change in behavior after acute infarction involving the inferior genu of the internal capsule documented by computed tomography (CT) and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). The acute syndrome featured fluctuating alertness, inattention, memory loss,
apathy
, abulia, and psychomotor retardation suggesting frontal lobe dysfunction. Contralateral hemiparesis and dysarthria were generally mild, except when the infarct extended into the posterior limb. Neuropsychological testing in five patients with left-sided infarcts revealed severe verbal memory loss. Additional cognitive deficits consistent with dementia were evident in four patients. A right-sided infarct caused transient impairment in visuospatial memory. Functional brain imaging in three patients using 133xenon regional cerebral blood flow (rCBF) and single photon emission computed tomography (SPECT) showed focal reduction in hemispheric perfusion most prominent in the ipsilateral inferior and medial frontal cortex. Perfusion was also defective in the medial and laterial temporal cortex. Important pathways of the limbic system traverse the inferior capsule in the region of the genu. Corticothalamic and thalamocortical fibers form the thalamic peduncles which detach from the internal capsule and enter the thalamus at its rostral and caudal poles and along its dorsal surface. The anterior thalamic peduncle, conveys reciprocal connections between the dorsomedial nucleus and the cingulate gyrus, as well as the prefrontal and orbitofrontal cortex. The inferior thalamic peduncle carries fibers which connect the thalamus with orbitofrontal, insular, and temporal cortex, as well as the amygdala via the ansa peduncularis to the ventral amygdalofugal pathway. Thus, damage to one or both white-matter tracts may occur with infarctions in the region of the inferior genu, causing striking frontal behavioral effects and memory loss in our patients associated with functional deactivation of the ipsilateral frontal and temporal cortex.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
...
PMID:Strategic infarcts in vascular dementia. A clinical and brain imaging experience. 776 29
Depression is frequently associated with cerebrovascular disease. Early detection and intervention in depression may enhance rehabilitation potential. Difficulties encountered by clinicians in identifying depression in patients with cerebrovascular disease are numerous. This two part review focuses on issues related to the diagnosis of depression with emphasis on recognition of depressive symptoms and their relevance to the diagnosis of depressive syndromes in the presence of vascular lesions and associated neurological deficits. Furthermore, the value of diagnostic instruments and biological markers in identifying depression following
stroke
has been critically evaluated. In this first part of this two part paper, phenomenological and nosological aspects are considered with an emphasis on symptom profile, significance of vegetative symptoms and other related emotional responses such as catastrophic reaction, emotionalism and
apathy
in the diagnosis of depression following
stroke
. The applicability of diagnostic subcategories to define depressive syndromes associated with cerebrovascular disease and its clinical relevance is also discussed. The authors stress that knowledge on phenomenology of depression and other emotional responses related to cerebrovascular disease will facilitate better understanding of its clinical presentation and may improve diagnostic acumen.
...
PMID:Factors complicating the diagnosis of depression in cerebrovascular disease, Part I--Phenomenological and nosological issues. 782 11
This study investigated emotional change following
stroke
at acute (2-week), 2-month, and 6-month time intervals. Five dimensions of emotional functioning were examined in a sample of 19
stroke
subjects:
indifference
, inappropriateness, depression, mania, and pragnosia (a defect in the pragmatics of social communicative style). Results showed that, at the 2-month point, differential recovery rates become apparent depending on hemispheric side of the
stroke
lesion. Increased
indifference
, inappropriateness, and depression appear to account for these results and suggest a slower rate of recovery on these variables in the left hemisphere group (LH n = 9) compared to the right (RH n = 10). Results further indicate that, at the 6-month point, emotional functioning in RH subjects appears to worsen. In contrast, emotional recovery in LH subjects seems to stabilize at this time. Clinical implications of these findings in terms of type and timing of intervention are discussed.
...
PMID:Emotional sequelae of stroke: a longitudinal perspective. 783 3
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