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Query: UMLS:C0038454 (stroke)
147,016 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Sixty surviving patients from a community-based stroke register who had CT scan evidence of a single brain lesion and neurological signs appropriate to it were interviewed three to five years following their first-ever stroke. Mood disorder (anxiety and depression), physical disability, and intellectual impairment were assessed using standardized measures. The position and volume of the brain lesion was determined from CT scans performed soon after the stroke. The prevalence of depressive disorder was lower in this sample than that reported in previous studies (DSM-IIIR major depression 8.3%; all DSM-IIIR depressive disorders 18.3%). Reports by other workers for an association of depressive disorder either with left-sided brain lesions, or with anteriorly placed lesions in the left cerebral hemisphere, were not supported. Neither was there evidence of a correlation between symptom score and proximity of the lesion to the anterior pole of the left cerebral hemisphere. Psychiatric symptom scores were however greater with larger volume brain lesions. Anxiety disorders, especially agoraphobia, were relatively common (20% if diagnosed in the presence of depressive disorder), but were not related to lesion location or volume.
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PMID:Mood disorders in long-term survivors of stroke: associations with brain lesion location and volume. 228 90

Neuropsychiatry represents a field of medicine situated at the crossroads of neurology and psychiatry, and deals with the interface of behavioral phenomena driven by brain dysfunction. Psychiatric symptoms are highly prevalent in these conditions, are a major source of disability and diminished quality of life, and potentially represent the target of treatment interventions that stand to significantly decrease the suffering they generate. In this article, the disease paradigm is explained, with particular attention to its role as an organizing principle for the field. Specific diseases including traumatic brain injury, stroke, Parkinson's disease, Alzheimer's disease, multiple sclerosis, and epilepsy are explored in relation to the presentation of multiple psychiatric phenotypes in each, associations with underlying brain pathology, and existing treatment approaches. Finally the article explores the inherent complexities in this area of research and proposes a framework for future work based on the understanding of phenomenology and associated risk factors, the involvement of the rapidly advancing field of neuroscience, and targeted treatment development to serve as a road map for advancement in the field..
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PMID:Psychiatric manifestations of neurologic disease: where are we headed? 1772 11

Cerebral amyloid angiopathy is diagnosed in stroke units after lobar intracerebral hemorrhage. CAA can also be diagnosed in memory clinics when patients are referred for cognitive impairment assessment, and may be a reason for admission to emergency or neurology departments because of rapidly progressive cognitive or neurological decline, or a transient focal neurological episode. CAA may even be observed in older community-dwelling individuals. Neuropsychological impairment in CAA has been described over the past 20 years. The symptoms most commonly reported are perceptual speed, episodic memory, semantic memory, attention and executive function, and global cognitive impairments. Psychiatric symptoms, such as personality changes, behavioral disturbances and depression, have been more recently described. CAA is also a risk factor for the development of dementia, and its relationship with Alzheimer's disease has been demonstrated in post-mortem studies. Yet, despite the increase in literature on CAA-related cognitive and psychiatric symptoms, the specific characteristics of symptoms in CAA are difficult to assess because of the substantial prevalence of comorbidities such as small vessel disease due to high blood pressure, Lewy body disease and, of course, AD, all of which act as important confounding factors. Also, within the entity of CAA itself, the additive and perhaps synergistic effects of each lesion on cognition remain to be assessed. In the present paper, the focus is on the latest evidence of neuropsychological impairment observed in CAA patients, and the emergence of a possible specific neuropsychological profile due to CAA is also discussed.
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PMID:Cerebral amyloid angiopathy-related cognitive impairment: The search for a specific neuropsychological pattern. 2899 4

Psychiatric symptoms may be related to a silent cerebral infarct, a phenomenon that has been described previously in literature. Acute psychosis or other neuropsychiatric symptoms including depression may present in stroke patients and patients with lesions either within the prefrontal or occipital cortices, or in subcortical areas such as the basal ganglia, thalamus, mid-brain, and brainstem. Psychosis in clinical stroke or in silent cerebral infarction is uncommon and not well documented in the literature. Neurological deficits are the most common presentation in stroke, and nearly a third of patients that suffer a stroke may experience psychological disorders such as depression and anxiety, related to physical disability. The present case report describes an elderly female patient who presented with hallucinations and depressive symptoms, and was discovered to have a recent right frontal brain infarction, without other significant neurological deficits.
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PMID:A Brief Psychotic Episode with Depressive Symptoms in Silent Right Frontal Lobe Infarct. 2920 79