Fletcher Graham Young1, Diep Nguyen2. 1. University of Pikeville, Kentucky College of Osteopathic Medicine, The Medical Center, Bowling Green, KY, 42101, USA. fletcheryoung@upike.edu. 2. University of Pikeville, Kentucky College of Osteopathic Medicine, The Medical Center, Bowling Green, KY, 42101, USA.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Pseudobulbar affect is a very distressing and underdiagnosed neuropsychiatric disorder that causes contextually inappropriate episodes of laughing and crying and general emotional incontinence. Although many proposed etiologies exist, the most widely accepted theory espouses the disruption of a corticopontine-cerebellar circuit that governs the modulation of emotional response. Pseudobulbar affect is commonly diagnosed secondary to primary neurological disorders such as amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, multiple sclerosis, and traumatic brain injury. Traditional pharmacological treatment of pseudobulbar affect is largely comprised of antidepressant therapy, including tricyclic antidepressants such as amitriptyline and selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors such as fluvoxamine. However, neither of these medication classes has been studied for the treatment of pseudobulbar affect in controlled trials, and their utility remains questionable. CASE PRESENTATION: We describe a case of a 62-year-old Caucasian man with history of traumatic brain injury, ischemic brainstem stroke, and depression who developed intractable pseudobulbar affect. This patient's intensely distressing symptoms were not alleviated by amitriptyline. However, after being placed on fixed-dose 20 mg/10 mg dextromethorphan/quinidine (Nuedexta), our patient experienced complete resolution of his symptoms. He has experienced no deleterious side effects. CONCLUSIONS: This case provides anecdotal evidence for the efficacy of dextromethorphan/quinidine in the treatment of pseudobulbar affect with remarkably swift and complete cessation of symptoms. As a secondary point, it is worth noting that our patient had experienced two devastating neurological traumas, both in anatomical areas that have been implicated in the corticopontine-cerebellar circuit thought to be responsible for pseudobulbar affect. However, only the second trauma, an acute left pontine infarction, produced symptoms of emotional disinhibition. The authors hope that reporting this case will provide both context for physicians managing this condition and hope for patients with this socially and psychiatrically damaging disease.
BACKGROUND: Pseudobulbar affect is a very distressing and underdiagnosed neuropsychiatric disorder that causes contextually inappropriate episodes of laughing and crying and general emotional incontinence. Although many proposed etiologies exist, the most widely accepted theory espouses the disruption of a corticopontine-cerebellar circuit that governs the modulation of emotional response. Pseudobulbar affect is commonly diagnosed secondary to primary neurological disorders such as amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, multiple sclerosis, and traumatic brain injury. Traditional pharmacological treatment of pseudobulbar affect is largely comprised of antidepressant therapy, including tricyclic antidepressants such as amitriptyline and selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors such as fluvoxamine. However, neither of these medication classes has been studied for the treatment of pseudobulbar affect in controlled trials, and their utility remains questionable. CASE PRESENTATION: We describe a case of a 62-year-old Caucasian man with history of traumatic brain injury, ischemic brainstem stroke, and depression who developed intractable pseudobulbar affect. This patient's intensely distressing symptoms were not alleviated by amitriptyline. However, after being placed on fixed-dose 20 mg/10 mg dextromethorphan/quinidine (Nuedexta), our patient experienced complete resolution of his symptoms. He has experienced no deleterious side effects. CONCLUSIONS: This case provides anecdotal evidence for the efficacy of dextromethorphan/quinidine in the treatment of pseudobulbar affect with remarkably swift and complete cessation of symptoms. As a secondary point, it is worth noting that our patient had experienced two devastating neurological traumas, both in anatomical areas that have been implicated in the corticopontine-cerebellar circuit thought to be responsible for pseudobulbar affect. However, only the second trauma, an acute left pontine infarction, produced symptoms of emotional disinhibition. The authors hope that reporting this case will provide both context for physicians managing this condition and hope for patients with this socially and psychiatrically damaging disease.
Entities:
Keywords:
Case report; Dextromethorphan/quinidine; Emotional incontinence; Pseudobulbar affect; Stroke
Pseudobulbar affect (PBA) is a neuropsychiatric condition defined by pronounced emotional lability and hypersensitivity to emotional or social stimuli. PBA most often presents as involuntary and inappropriate laughing or crying and occurs out of proportion or incongruent to the patient’s subjective emotional state. Although many proposed etiologies exist, PBA is thought to relate to the release of brainstem emotional control centers from regulation by the frontal lobes [1]. Specifically, the most widely accepted theory maintains that the classic signs of emotional dysmetria are caused by the disruption of a distinct corticopontine–cerebellar circuit that governs the modulation of emotional response [2] (Fig. 1).
We present a case of a 62-year-old Caucasian man with several neurovascular and psychiatric conditions. The patient was first injured in 1980 in a construction worksite accident, wherein he was struck by a falling cinder block and experienced significant cranial trauma that required a right frontotemporal craniotomy and partial brain resection. The resected bone was then replaced with artificial titanium plating. Following this surgery, the patient remained comatose for a period of 6 days, finally awakening on Christmas Day 1980. Follow-up magnetic resonance imaging and computed tomography confirmed the presence of a large, right-sided cystic encephalomalacia with subsequent gliosis subjacent to the resected brain tissue. Following this initial injury, the patient surprisingly made a full recovery, with no permanent neurological deficits. However, he began to experience painful and intractable headaches. Despite the best efforts of his physicians, these headaches soon became debilitating and made it difficult for the patient to hold a steady job. For the next 30 years, he struggled with his injury, eventually becoming homeless. During one visit to the hospital, he was diagnosed with major depressive disorder and subsequently was started on amitriptyline, which the patient has taken ever since. For most of this period, however, the patient had little or no regular healthcare, and his health slowly deteriorated.In 2013, the patient, a lifetime smoker, experienced a thromboembolic left pontine infarction. He again recovered, and, interestingly, this event caused a dramatic reduction in the frequency and intensity of the patient’s headaches. However, this time, the patient retained a unilateral right-sided oculomotor nerve palsy and significant speech deficits for years afterward. Several days after this stroke, the patient began to experience episodes of inappropriate laughing and crying and general emotional incontinence. At this time, he was diagnosed with PBA. In addition to his amitriptyline, initial attempts at treatment with several commonly prescribed antidepressants had no effect on the patient’s PBA symptoms. The patient stated that he was not so much bothered by his emotional incontinence in and of itself, but rather by the perception of others in social or everyday public settings. The patient gradually became more socially reserved. Apprehensive of inappropriate and involuntary displays of emotion, the patient started to avoid public settings altogether, such as church and the grocery store. In early 2017, after years of unsuccessful pharmacotherapy, the patient was placed on DM/Q 30 mg by mouth twice daily. At this time, the patient’s vital signs were recorded as follows: blood pressure 116/82 mmHg, weight 296 lb., body mass index 42.47 kg/m2, heart rate 82 beats/minute, respiratory rate 20 breaths/minute, body temperature 97.7 °F, and oxygen saturation 93%. Within 1 week, he experienced total resolution of his symptoms. The patient has experienced no negative side effects. Additionally, he reports that if he forgets or is unable to take this medication for 2–3 days, he begins to experience breakthrough symptoms, which quickly resolve after resuming medication.This patient’s quality of life is now much improved. The authors are happy to report that he is recently married and living comfortably, thanks to federal government benefits. Through great personal effort, the patient has recovered near-full speech ability and is no longer apprehensive of social settings.
Discussion
Although the precise mechanisms of DMQ in ameliorating PBA are not known, modulation of excessive glutamatergic transmission within corticopontine–cerebellar circuits may contribute to its benefits [2]. Before the approval of DM/Q in 2011, PBA and similar syndromes involving emotional incontinence were, and still are, treated off-label with antidepressants, including tricyclic antidepressants such as amitriptyline and selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors such as fluvoxamine [2]. However, experimental evidence in the form of clinical trials supporting the efficacy of these medication classes in treating PBA is lacking [10]. DM/Q, however, has been proved to be very effective. In a randomized, double-blind, controlled 4-week study of 140 patients with PBA and ALS, DM/Q 30/30 mg was proved to be superior to its individual component drugs [11]. A 12-week, double-blind, placebo-controlled study of DM/Q 30/30 mg showed similar efficacy in 150 patients with MS and PBA. A subsequent 12-week study of patients with PBA and ALS or MS showed superiority to placebo for the 20/10- and 30/10-mg doses [12]. In a 12-week randomized, double-blind trial titled STAR, 326 patients with ALS and MS who had clinically significant PBA were treated twice daily with either DM/Q or placebo [13]. Efficacy was maintained over the length of the trial, an open-label extension (30/10 mg dose), with further improvement of mean efficacy scores [13]. In a 12-week noncomparative cohort study of 120 patients, PRISM II, DM/Q 20/10 mg twice daily also improved PBA secondary to traumatic brain injury [14]. Across these studies, DM/Q was generally safe and well tolerated, with no evidence of clinically relevant cardiac or respiratory effects. Adverse side effects have been described as mostly mild or moderate and include nausea, dizziness, headache, weakness, and gastrointestinal complaints [11, 13].The success in our patient’s case speaks to the efficacy of DM/Q for the treatment of PBA in acutely affected patients, but it also raises questions regarding the pathophysiological “gate control” model of PBA, which posits the cerebellum as the apparatus responsible for unconscious modulation of emotional expression, scaling it appropriately and producing an emotionally congruent response according to the contextual information transmitted via descending pathways from the sensory cortex through the frontal and temporal cortices [15].Our patient had experienced two devastating neurological traumas, both in anatomical areas that have been implicated in the corticopontine–cerebellar circuit thought to be responsible for PBA. The patient’s first injury, which resulted in the removal of a significant portion of the frontotemporal cortex, should theoretically have interrupted the flow of contextual information to the pons and cerebellum and produced symptoms of emotional disinhibition. However, only the second trauma many years later, an acute left pontine infarction, induced the predicted symptoms of PBA.With these data in mind and the success in our patient’s case, the authors encourage managing physicians to consider DM/Q for the treatment of PBA in affected neuropsychiatric patients and to keep in mind the clinical variability of this condition.
Conclusions
Although DM/Q has been proved to be both safe and clinically efficacious in controlled studies, it is a relatively new entrant in the field of neuropsychiatric illness. Although the precise therapeutic mechanism is still a subject of study, it is possible that DM/Q will play a much larger role in the treatment of a diverse array of neurological illnesses in the near future. Its network of neurochemical mechanisms is a subject of ongoing research and has been promoted as a possible candidate for medical therapies for depression, pain, seizures, and methotrexatetoxicity [9].This case provides anecdotal evidence for the efficacy of DM/Q in the treatment of PBA, with a remarkably swift and complete cessation of symptoms in an acutely affected patient. It is the only drug approved for the treatment of PBA, but many physicians are understandably wary of straying from established avenues of pharmacotherapy. The authors hope that reporting this case will provide both context for physicians managing this condition and hope for patients with this socially and psychiatrically damaging disease. In addition, this case underlines the need for a more precise understanding of the pathophysiology of PBA, because the current “gate control” model cannot adequately explain the discrepancy in resultant symptoms between the patient’s two neurological traumas. Further research is required in order to provide a more complete pathological picture of this complex neurological disease.Additional file 1:
Figure 2 Structural formula of dextromethorphan. Figure 3 Structural formula of quinidine sulfate. Table 1 Concurrent Medications. Table 2 History.
Authors: Hillel S Panitch; Ronald A Thisted; Richard A Smith; Daniel R Wynn; James P Wymer; Anat Achiron; Timothy L Vollmer; Raul N Mandler; Dennis W Dietrich; Malcolm Fletcher; Laura E Pope; James E Berg; Ariel Miller Journal: Ann Neurol Date: 2006-05 Impact factor: 10.422
Authors: Jeffrey L Cummings; David B Arciniegas; Benjamin R Brooks; Robert M Herndon; Edward C Lauterbach; Erik P Pioro; Robert G Robinson; Douglas W Scharre; Randolph B Schiffer; Daniel Weintraub Journal: CNS Spectr Date: 2006-06 Impact factor: 3.790
Authors: Erik P Pioro; Benjamin Rix Brooks; Jeffrey Cummings; Randolph Schiffer; Ronald A Thisted; Daniel Wynn; Adrian Hepner; Randall Kaye Journal: Ann Neurol Date: 2010-11 Impact factor: 10.422
Authors: B R Brooks; R A Thisted; S H Appel; W G Bradley; R K Olney; J E Berg; L E Pope; R A Smith Journal: Neurology Date: 2004-10-26 Impact factor: 9.910
Authors: Richard A Smith; James E Berg; Laura E Pope; Janice D Callahan; Daniel Wynn; Ronald A Thisted Journal: Mult Scler Date: 2004-12 Impact factor: 6.312
Authors: Linda Nguyen; Kelan L Thomas; Brandon P Lucke-Wold; John Z Cavendish; Molly S Crowe; Rae R Matsumoto Journal: Pharmacol Ther Date: 2016-01-28 Impact factor: 12.310