| Literature DB >> 24449063 |
Michael J Devine1, Paul Bentley, Brynmor Jones, Gary Hotton, Richard J Greenwood, I Harri Jenkins, Eileen M Joyce, Paresh A Malhotra.
Abstract
Psychotic symptoms have previously been reported following right hemisphere brain injury. We sought to identify the specific neuroanatomical basis of delusions following stroke by studying a series of patients with post-stroke psychosis. Lesion overlap analysis was conducted on three individuals with delusions following right hemisphere stroke. These cases were compared with a control group of patients with similar anatomical damage. The main outcome measures were presence of delusions and presence of behavioural susceptibility. The right inferior frontal gyrus and underlying white matter, including the superior longitudinal fasciculus and anterior corona radiata, were involved in all three cases. All three had a preexisting untreated psychiatric disorder. In contrast, only one of nine control cases with equivalent lesions had evidence of previous psychiatric disorder (p = 0.0182, Fisher's exact test), and this was being treated at the time of stroke. We provide clinical evidence from patients with structural brain lesions implicating damage to the right inferior frontal lobe in the generation of persistent psychosis following stroke. We suggest that preexisting psychiatric disease provided a behavioural susceptibility to develop delusions in these individuals.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 24449063 PMCID: PMC3948509 DOI: 10.1007/s00415-014-7242-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Neurol ISSN: 0340-5354 Impact factor: 4.849
Fig. 1a–c Lesions. Case 1 suffered from a haemorrhagic stroke, whereas Cases 2 and 3 had ischaemic lesions. d Lesion Overlap. There was lesion overlap at five slice levels (displayed in blue on sagittal image). The overlap region (displayed in red on axial and cutout images) was damaged in all three cases (Centre: MNI coordinates 46,23,16)