Literature DB >> 10066006

A prospective, long-term study of personality traits in patients with intractable obsessional illness treated by capsulotomy.

P Mindus1, G Edman, S Andréewitch.   

Abstract

The crux when contemplating neurosurgery for otherwise intractable mental illness is whether there is a price which the patient may have to pay, in terms of adverse personality changes, for symptom relief. In the present study of 19 patients undergoing thermo-capsulotomy for intractable obsessional illness, personality characteristics were studied pre-operatively, and at 1-year and 8-year follow-up, using the Karolinska Scales of Personality (KSP). Small mean score changes toward normalization were apparent on all 15 KSP scales at the 1-year follow-up, and significant improvements in anxiety proneness were noted at the 8-year follow-up. One patient who sustained a surgical complication showed deviant postoperative scores on scales related to psychopathic traits. There were no such deviant scores for the remaining subjects. The incidence of adverse personality changes following capsulotomy is low and does not increase with time. This conclusion, based on groups of patients, does not of course preclude the possibility that adverse personality changes may occur in individual patients.

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Year:  1999        PMID: 10066006     DOI: 10.1111/j.1600-0447.1999.tb05383.x

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Acta Psychiatr Scand        ISSN: 0001-690X            Impact factor:   6.392


  3 in total

1.  Bilateral thermal capsulotomy with MR-guided focused ultrasound for patients with treatment-refractory obsessive-compulsive disorder: a proof-of-concept study.

Authors:  H H Jung; S J Kim; D Roh; J G Chang; W S Chang; E J Kweon; C-H Kim; J W Chang
Journal:  Mol Psychiatry       Date:  2014-11-25       Impact factor: 15.992

Review 2.  The prefrontal cortex and neurosurgical treatment for intractable OCD.

Authors:  Steven A Rasmussen; Wayne K Goodman
Journal:  Neuropsychopharmacology       Date:  2021-08-25       Impact factor: 7.853

3.  Differential assessment of frontally-mediated behaviors between self- and informant-report in patients with obsessive-compulsive disorder following gamma ventral capsulotomy.

Authors:  Michelle T Kassel; Olga Lositsky; Avinash R Vaidya; David Badre; Paul F Malloy; Benjamin D Greenberg; Richard Marsland; Georg Noren; Anna Sherman; Steven A Rasmussen; Nicole C R McLaughlin
Journal:  Neuropsychologia       Date:  2022-03-18       Impact factor: 3.054

  3 in total

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