OBJECTIVES: To evaluate functioning, 18 months after surgery, of 49 patients with good neurological recovery following aneurysmal subarachnoid haemorrhage (SAH), and to determine the extent of any improvements in disturbances of mood, cognitive functioning, and levels of activity and participation previously observed at 9 month follow up. METHODS: SAH patients, matched for age, gender, and occupation with healthy control participants, completely quantitative measures of mood (HADS, FIES, BDI) and activity/participation (BICRO-39 scales), and a brief cognitive assessment battery (verbal fluency, digit span, prose recall). Controls completed the HADS and the BICRO-39. RESULTS: Patients showed some recovery of cognitive functioning, though impairments of prose recall persisted. Anxiety and depression symptoms were higher in patients than in controls, but fewer than 20% scored in the clinical range on any questionnaires except for RIES-Intrusive thoughts (22%); only three showed signs of full blown post-traumatic stress disorder. Almost half showed elevated dependence on others for domestic activities and organisation and abnormally low levels of employment. Very little variance in outcome was predicted by demographic variables, neurological or cognitive impairment, prior life stress, or mood. However, levels of social activity and self-organisation were related to persisting fatigue. CONCLUSIONS: The observed decline in intrusive thoughts and avoidance over time is consistent with that seen after life threatening illness or trauma. The persistent reductions in independence and levels of employment may in some cases reflect considered lifestyle adjustments rather than adverse and unwanted changes but in others indicate a need for focused rehabilitation.
OBJECTIVES: To evaluate functioning, 18 months after surgery, of 49 patients with good neurological recovery following aneurysmal subarachnoid haemorrhage (SAH), and to determine the extent of any improvements in disturbances of mood, cognitive functioning, and levels of activity and participation previously observed at 9 month follow up. METHODS:SAHpatients, matched for age, gender, and occupation with healthy control participants, completely quantitative measures of mood (HADS, FIES, BDI) and activity/participation (BICRO-39 scales), and a brief cognitive assessment battery (verbal fluency, digit span, prose recall). Controls completed the HADS and the BICRO-39. RESULTS:Patients showed some recovery of cognitive functioning, though impairments of prose recall persisted. Anxiety and depression symptoms were higher in patients than in controls, but fewer than 20% scored in the clinical range on any questionnaires except for RIES-Intrusive thoughts (22%); only three showed signs of full blown post-traumatic stress disorder. Almost half showed elevated dependence on others for domestic activities and organisation and abnormally low levels of employment. Very little variance in outcome was predicted by demographic variables, neurological or cognitive impairment, prior life stress, or mood. However, levels of social activity and self-organisation were related to persisting fatigue. CONCLUSIONS: The observed decline in intrusive thoughts and avoidance over time is consistent with that seen after life threatening illness or trauma. The persistent reductions in independence and levels of employment may in some cases reflect considered lifestyle adjustments rather than adverse and unwanted changes but in others indicate a need for focused rehabilitation.
Authors: Jose Javier Provencio; Valerie Swank; Haiyan Lu; Sylvain Brunet; Selva Baltan; Rohini V Khapre; Himabindu Seerapu; Olga N Kokiko-Cochran; Bruce T Lamb; Richard M Ransohoff Journal: Brain Behav Immun Date: 2016-02-09 Impact factor: 7.217
Authors: Martin N Stienen; Johanna M Visser-Meily; Tom A Schweizer; Daniel Hänggi; R Loch Macdonald; Mervyn D I Vergouwen Journal: Neurocrit Care Date: 2019-06 Impact factor: 3.210
Authors: José León-Carrión; María del Rosario Domínguez-Morales; Juan Manuel Barroso y Martín; Francisco Murillo-Cabezas Journal: Pituitary Date: 2005 Impact factor: 4.107
Authors: Christopher R Carpenter; Adnan M Hussain; Michael J Ward; Gregory J Zipfel; Susan Fowler; Jesse M Pines; Marco L A Sivilotti Journal: Acad Emerg Med Date: 2016-09-06 Impact factor: 3.451