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Query: UMLS:C0085632 (
apathy
)
4,089
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Long-term survivors of cardiac arrest may suffer from mild cerebral impairment manifested primarily by personality changes and behavioral symptoms that can be mistaken for emotional responses to illness. The authors report six cases that illustrate the clinical problem of differentiating depression from organic
brain dysfunction
in this population. The diagnosis is facilitated by observation over time and by information from the spouse on baseline and current function. Chronicity, dysinhibition,
apathy
, and disturbances of judgment and insight indicate
cerebral dysfunction
. The accurate diagnosis of cerebral impairment after cardiac arrest is essential to the rehabilitation process.
...
PMID:Unrecognized organic mental disorders in survivors of cardiac arrest. 661 28
Antiepileptic drugs taken by pregnant epileptic women are known human teratogens. They may also cause pharmacological side effects in the newborn, i.e. sedation and or withdrawal symptoms. We examined the relationship between the maternal antiepileptic therapy, neonatal behaviour and later neurological functions in infancy. The study comprised 40 children exposed in utero to a single antiepileptic drug (phenobarbitone, phenytoin, valproic acid). Valproic-acid-exposed children were the highest compromised, except for
apathy
, which was most profound in phenobarbitone-exposed neonates. Valproic acid serum concentrations at birth correlated with the degree of neonatal hyper-excitability and neurological dysfunction when children were re-examined 6 years later. We suggest that valproic acid may not only cause malformations but also
cerebral dysfunction
immediate and long term.
...
PMID:Antiepileptic drug treatment in pregnancy: drug side effects in the neonate and neurological outcome. 881 15
Alzheimer disease (AD) is a multifaceted disorder with primary manifestations involving neuropsychologic, neuropsychiatric, and neurologic domains. These primary disturbances are based on
brain dysfunction
and produce secondary effects on patient activities of daily living and quality of life, and have adverse consequences for caregivers, family members, and society.
Apathy
, agitation, mood disturbances, irritability, disinhibition, delusions, aberrant motor behavior, and abnormalities of sleep and eating are common in AD. The neuropsychiatric disorders of AD are mediated by limbic system and frontal lobe dysfunction and are related in part to the cholinergic deficiency affecting these structures. Cholinomimetic therapy ameliorates the behavioral and emotional disturbances of AD. Cholinergic compounds are unique psychotropic agents that exhibit disease specificity, exerting beneficial effects only in diseases such as AD with cholinergic deficits. Cholinergic agents are potentially useful in the treatment of behavioral disturbances of AD, and their neuropsychiatric effects should be assessed in all clinical trials of these compounds.
...
PMID:Changes in neuropsychiatric symptoms as outcome measures in clinical trials with cholinergic therapies for Alzheimer disease. 933 66
Many studies have shown that brain infections occur early in HIV infection, usually within weeks of seroconversion. Asymptomatic seropositive persons frequently show HIV in the brain and spinal fluid. The most common presenting symptoms are memory loss, walking difficulties, mental slowing, and depressive symptoms. In patients with localized abnormalities, such as weakness, another opportunistic infection should be suspected. Most patients with HIV dementia have clear psychomotor slowing, greater than normal reflexes, and signs indicating widespread
brain dysfunction
. As the dementia progresses, patients develop language and attention problems,
apathy
, severe psychomotor slowing, and lack of insight. Delirium is a frequent side effect of the medicines used to treat dementia. Diagnosis is fairly simple, with MRI being used to rule out CMV, progressive multifocal leukoencephalopathy, and herpes. AZT and antiretrovirals offer protective effects to delay the onset and progression of AIDS dementia. The AIDS Clinical Trials Group has completed a study showing that nimodipine, a calcium-channel blocker, can lessen damage to the brain, and is safe and generally well tolerated. Combination therapies, such as antiretrovirals with cytokine blockers, will probably emerge as the treatment of choice for dementia.
...
PMID:Diagnosing and treating HIV dementia. 1136 57
The brain mediates and integrates all cognitive activities, emotional experiences and finally behaviours. Stroke is undoubtedly a privileged disease for human behavioural studies, because of its high incidence. Recent advances in high-resolution magnetic resonance imaging techniques and functional neuroimaging allow both the precise localization of lesions and on-line visualization of the activity of cerebral areas and networks. Nevertheless, the neuropsychiatry of stroke remains uncertain in its relationship with
brain dysfunction
. Clinical studies on registry populations, single case studies, and functional neuroimaging data provide interesting findings, but differences in methods and great individual intervariability still prevent a complete understanding of emotional perception and behavioural responses in stroke. We adopted an anatomical-functional model as an operational framework in order to systematize the recent literature on emotional, behavioural and mood changes after stroke. The dysfunction of the areas subserving fundamental and executive functions induces behavioural and affective changes (such as depression, anxiety,
apathy
) that reflect the dysfunction of the whole system. Conversely, lesions in the system of instrumental functions induce signature syndromes (aphasia, anosognosia). At any delay from stroke, the diagnosis and treatment of mood and behavioural changes are a priority for clinicians and healthcare professionals to improve the quality of life of patients.
...
PMID:Emotions, behaviours and mood changes in stroke. 1179 52
In patients with the frontal variant of frontotemporal lobar degeneration (fv-FTLD), behavioral abnormalities may vary from
apathy
with motor slowness (apathetic form) to disinhibition with agitation (disinhibited form). These clinical presentations may be related to specific regional
cerebral dysfunction
and to deficit in the serotoninergic system. We studied cerebral glucose uptake using (18)F-fluorodeoxyglucose and positron emission tomography in 18 patients fulfilling clinical criteria for fv-FTLD and showing, respectively, an apathetic or disinhibited behavioral syndrome. In eight of these patients, we also evaluated the 5-hydroxytryptamine-2A receptor cerebral receptor distribution with [(11)C]MDL and positron emission tomography. We found a reduction of frontal glucose metabolism in the whole group of fv-FTLD patients.
Apathetic
syndrome was associated with a prevalent dorsolateral and frontal medial hypometabolism, whereas the disinhibited syndrome demonstrated a selective hypometabolism in interconnected limbic structures (the cingulate cortex, hippocampus/amygdala, and accumbens nucleus). The in vivo measurements of [(11)C]MDL indicated a significant reduction of 5-hydroxytryptamine-2A receptors in orbitofrontal, frontal medial, and cingulate cortices. These (18)F-fluorodeoxyglucose positron emission tomography changes can be considered as specific functional markers of the different behavioral presentations in fv-FTLD. The serotoninergic system dysfunction provides a rationale for therapeutic trials with selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors.
...
PMID:Glucose metabolism and serotonin receptors in the frontotemporal lobe degeneration. 1566 60
The psychopathology of stroke encompasses several psychiatric and behavioral disorders that have high prevalence in the geriatric population, reduce the patient autonomy and increase the caregiver's burden. These disorders are usually associated with other cognitive and neurological deficits, and are labelled as neuropsychiatric when the whole clinical picture is consistent with the specific dysfunction of a neural system or brain region. Thus the neuropsychiatry of stroke comprises disorders of the perception/identification of the self and the environment (anosognosia of hemiplegia, misidentification syndromes, confabulations, visual hallucinations, delirium and acute confusional state), amotivational syndromes (
apathy
and athymhormia), disorders of emotional reactivity (blunted affect, emotional incontinence, irritability, catastrophic reactions), poor impulse or ideation control (mania) and personality changes. The clinical profile of the subcortical vascular dementia also points to specific
brain dysfunction
(frontal-subcortical pathways) that manifests with behavioral (depression, emotionalism, irritability) and cognitive symptoms (psychomotor retardation, attention, executive and memory deficits). However, post-stroke depression and anxiety, which have a more variable clinical presentation and might be assimilated, for several aspects, to post-traumatic or adaptive disorders, are disorders less characterized in their neural correlates.
...
PMID:[Psychopathology of stroke]. 1631 15
The objective of this update is to give an overview of the effects of dietary nutrients on the structure and certain functions of the brain. As any other organ, the brain is elaborated from substances present in the diet (sometimes exclusively, for vitamins, minerals, essential amino-acids and essential fatty acids, including omega- 3 polyunsaturated fatty acids). However, for long it was not fully accepted that food can have an influence on brain structure, and thus on its function, including cognitive and intellectuals. In fact, most micronutrients (vitamins and trace-elements) have been directly evaluated in the setting of cerebral functioning. For instance, to produce energy, the use of glucose by nervous tissue implies the presence of vitamin B1; this vitamin modulates cognitive performance, especially in the elderly. Vitamin B9 preserves brain during its development and memory during ageing. Vitamin B6 is likely to benefit in treating premenstrual depression. Vitamins B6 and B12, among others, are directly involved in the synthesis of some neurotransmitters. Vitamin B12 delays the onset of signs of dementia (and blood abnormalities), provided it is administered in a precise clinical timing window, before the onset of the first symptoms. Supplementation with cobalamin improves cerebral and cognitive functions in the elderly; it frequently improves the functioning of factors related to the frontal lobe, as well as the language function of those with cognitive disorders. Adolescents who have a borderline level of vitamin B12 develop signs of cognitive changes. In the brain, the nerve endings contain the highest concentrations of vitamin C in the human body (after the suprarenal glands). Vitamin D (or certain of its analogues) could be of interest in the prevention of various aspects of neurodegenerative or neuroimmune diseases. Among the various vitamin E components (tocopherols and tocotrienols), only alpha-tocopherol is actively uptaken by the brain and is directly involved in nervous membranes protection. Even vitamin K has been involved in nervous tissue biochemistry. Iron is necessary to ensure oxygenation and to produce energy in the cerebral parenchyma (via cytochrome oxidase), and for the synthesis of neurotransmitters and myelin; iron deficiency is found in children with attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder. Iron concentrations in the umbilical artery are critical during the development of the foetus, and in relation with the IQ in the child; infantile anaemia with its associated iron deficiency is linked to perturbation of the development of cognitive functions. Iron deficiency anaemia is common, particularly in women, and is associated, for instance, with
apathy
, depression and rapid fatigue when exercising. Lithium importance, at least in psychiatry, is known for a long time. Magnesium plays important roles in all the major metabolisms: in oxidation-reduction and in ionic regulation, among others. Zinc participates among others in the perception of taste. An unbalanced copper metabolism homeostasis (due to dietary deficiency) could be linked to Alzheimer disease. The iodine provided by the thyroid hormone ensures the energy metabolism of the cerebral cells; the dietary reduction of iodine during pregnancy induces severe
cerebral dysfunction
, actually leading to cretinism. Among many mechanisms, manganese, copper, and zinc participate in enzymatic mechanisms that protect against free radicals, toxic derivatives of oxygen. More specifically, the full genetic potential of the child for physical growth ad mental development may be compromised due to deficiency (even subclinical) of micronutrients. Children and adolescents with poor nutritional status are exposed to alterations of mental and behavioural functions that can be corrected by dietary measures, but only to certain extend. Indeed, nutrient composition and meal pattern can exert either immediate or long-term effects, beneficial or adverse. Brain diseases during aging can also be due to failure for protective mechanism, due to dietary deficiencies, for instance in anti-oxidants and nutrients (trace elements, vitamins, non essential micronutrients such as polyphenols) related with protection against free radicals. Macronutrients are presented in the accompanying paper.
...
PMID:Effects of nutrients (in food) on the structure and function of the nervous system: update on dietary requirements for brain. Part 1: micronutrients. 1706 9
The spectrum of paraneoplastic neurologic syndromes has increased with the description of encephalitis associated with antibodies against cell surface and synaptic proteins. Subacute cognitive impairment, movement disorders, late onset epilepsy and neuropsychiatric syndromes were recently linked to paraneoplastic encephalitis. Despite that, probably some syndromes and antibodies are yet to be reported. Herein we reported the clinical and neuroimaging pictures of a patient with late onset medial temporal lobe epilepsy, subtle cognitive impairment, psychosis and severe
apathy
diagnosed with antibody-negative paraneoplastic encephalitis due to colonic adenocarcinoma. The
apathy
markedly improved after removal of the tumor, without concomitant immunotherapy (steroids, intravenous immunoglobulins, immunosuppressants, plasmapheresis, etc.). Our report highlights the importance of a full clinical and neurologic investigation in cases of atypical neuropsychiatric presentations, particularly in the elderly and with the concomitance of epilepsy and cognitive decline. Even chronic presentations must be considered. Neuroimaging is an important tool to demonstrate structural and functional
brain dysfunction
in these cases. Colonic adenocarcinoma should be searched for in cases in which a typical tumor related to paraneoplastic neurologic syndromes is not found.
...
PMID:Paraneoplastic limbic encephalitis with prominent neuropsychiatric apathy. 2439 44
Reduced awareness of illness is a well-known phenomenon that has been understudied in remitted patients with bipolar disorder. In particular, the relationship between reduced awareness and executive dysfunction is an intriguing question that has yet to be resolved. The aim of the current study is to analyze the link between reduced awareness,
brain dysfunction
, and concomitant cognitive-behavioral disturbances from a neurocognitive perspective. In previous studies, we demonstrated the role of the anterior cingulate cortex (ACC) in the unawareness of distinct pathologies that exhibit overlapping symptoms in the context of overlapping circuit-specific dysfunction. Given the clinical importance of the results obtained, the present study considers six aware and four unaware remitted bipolar disorder patients. Cingulate functionality was assessed with functional magnetic resonance imaging while patients performed a go/no-go task. Patients were also studied on an overall cognitive task battery and with behavioral assessment of mood changes in terms of
apathy
and disinhibited behavior. Unaware patients showed frontoparietal hypo-perfusion, with a significant reduction of task-sensitive activity in the bilateral superior and middle frontal gyrus, putamen, insular, and ACCs.
...
PMID:Unawareness of bipolar disorder: the role of the cingulate cortex. 2483 43
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