| Literature DB >> 35602363 |
Gautam Saha1, Kaustav Chakraborty1, Amrit Pattojoshi2.
Abstract
Entities:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35602363 PMCID: PMC9122169 DOI: 10.4103/indianjpsychiatry.indianjpsychiatry_34_22
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Indian J Psychiatry ISSN: 0019-5545 Impact factor: 2.983
Checklist for treating psychiatrist while evaluating post stoke and posttraumatic brain injury psychiatric disorders
| • Patient conscious, alert and cooperative |
| • Adequate clinical history |
| • Reliable informant who can be a primary care giver or eye witness |
| • History of preexisting psychiatric disorder |
| • History of SUDs |
| • Temporal correlation between stroke/TBI and onset of psychiatric disorders |
| • Biochemical investigations |
| • Neuroimaging, EEG |
| • Medicine chart |
| • BP, pulse rate, intake-output chart |
| • Detailed mental status examination (if uncooperative, Kirby’s pro forma for examining uncooperative patients should be used) |
| • Screening instruments for psychiatric disorders |
| • Liaison with neurologist, neurosurgeon |
TBI – Traumatic brain injury; SUDs – Substance use disorders; EEG – Electroencephalography
Screening tools and management of various psychiatric disorders following stroke/traumatic brain injury
| Clinical condition | Name of screening instruments | Management |
|---|---|---|
| Poststroke/post-TBI depressive disorders | HADS | SSRIs, SNRIs and CBT |
| BDI | ||
| GDS | ||
| HDRS | ||
| PHQ-9 | ||
| CES-D | ||
| Poststroke/post-TBI anxiety disorders | HAS | SSRIs, SNRIs, TCAs, antipsychotics, anticonvulsants, anxiolytics, trauma-focussed therapies and CBT |
| Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale-Anxiety Subscale | SSRIs, SNRIs, TCAs, yoga, tai-chi, self-help mindfulness, and relaxation techniques | |
| Poststroke/post-TBI PTSD | PTSD checklist for a stressor, TIA or stroke as stressor | |
| Impact of Events Scale-revised | ||
| Posttraumatic Stress Diagnostic Scale | ||
| Clinician administered PTSD Scale | ||
| Poststroke/post-TBI psychosis | BPRS | SGAs e.g., quetiapine, risperidone and olanzapine, injectable antipsychotics, CBT for hallucination or delusion |
| Poststroke/post-TBI mania | YMRS | Mood stabilisers e.g., valproate, carbamazepine, oxcarbazepine etc.; antipsychotics e.g., olanzapine, quetiapine, risperidone etc., and benzodiazepines |
| Poststroke/post-TBI personality disorders | IPDE | Fluoxetine, citalopram, lithium, beta-adrenergic antagonists |
| EPQ | ||
| MMPI | ||
| IPDS | ||
| Poststroke fatigue | FSS | Modafinil, regular physical exercises |
| MAF | ||
| VAS-F | ||
| Poststroke apathy | Apathy Scale | Nefiracetam, donepezil, bromocriptine, modafinil, methylphenidate, ropinirole and zolpidem |
| Apathy Evaluation Scale |
TBI – Traumatic brain injury; HADS – Hospital Anxiety Depression Scale; BDI – Beck depression inventory; GDS – Geriatric Depression Scale; HDRS – Hamilton Depression Rating Scale; PHQ-9 – Nine-item Patient Health Questionnaire; CES-D – Centre for epidemiological studies depression; SSRIs – Selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors; SNRIs – Serotonin norepinephrine reuptake inhibitors, CBT – Cognitive behavioural therapy; HAS – Hamilton Anxiety Scale; TCAs – Tri-cyclic antidepressants; BPRS – Brief Psychiatric Rating Scale; YMRS – Young’s Mania Rating Scale; SGAs – Second generation antipsychotics; IPDE – International personality disorder examination; EPQ – Eysenck’s personality questionnaire; MMPI – Minnesota multiphasic personality inventory; IPDS – Iowa personality disorder screen; FSS – Fatigue Severity Scale; MAF – Multidimensional assessment of fatigue; VAS-F – Visual Analog Scale–Fatigue; PTSD – Posttraumatic stress disorders; TIA – Transient ischemic attack
Pharmacological agents used to treat psychiatric disorders following traumatic brain injury and their strength of recommendation
| Name of the molecule | Dose range | Clinical effect | Strength of recommendation |
|---|---|---|---|
| MPH[ | 3 mg/kg, two times daily | Increased the speed of information processing in several neuropsychological tests | B |
| Agomelatine[ | 25 mg at night | Increased efficiency of sleep | C |
| Modafinil[ | 300-600 mg/d | Improvement in fatigue but no improvement in excessive daytime sleepiness | A |
| Amantadine[ | 100 mg twice daily | Reduced frequency and severity of aggression and irritability | A |
| Valproate[ | 1000-2000 mg/day | Improvement in mood symptoms. Valproate should not be used prophylactically for posttraumatic seizures | B |
| SSRIs[ | Variable dosages | Citalopram and sertraline should not be used for prevention of relapse of depressive symptoms after TBI | B |
| Venlafaxine[ | 75 mg twice daily | Improved obsessive-compulsive symptoms, irritability and sadness | C |
| Bromocriptine[ | 5 g, twice daily | Did not improve alertness, was associated with side effects | B |
| Rivastigmine[ | 3-6 mg/d | Was beneficial for moderate to severe memory impairment | B |
| Galantamine[ | 16-24 mg/d | Improved fatigue, initiative, attention and memory | B |
| Donepezil[ | 10-20 mg/d | Improved metabolism in all 4 lobes of brain, overall clinical improvement and memory improvement | B |
| Naltrexone[ | 50-100 mg | Improved initiation, attention and accuracy of answering nonverbal questions | C |
| Beta blockers (Propranolol)[ | 420-520 mg/d | Number of attempted assaults and agitated episodes decreased | A |
| IM Droperidol and Haloperidol[ | IM droperidol 1.25-10 mg and IM haloperidol 2.5-10 mg | IM droperidol achieved faster calming compared to IM haloperidol | B |
| Clozapine[ | 300-750 mg | Marked decrease in aggression | C |
| Quetiapine[ | 25-300 mg | Reduction in aggression | B |
| Ziprasidone[ | 40-80 mg | Decrease in agitated behavior | C |
| Carbamazepine[ | 400-800 mg | Improvement in social disinhibition and agitation was noted | B |
| Lamotrigine[ | 50 mg | There was the decreased need for benzodiazepines to control outburst | C |
| Lithium[ | 900 mg/d | Decreased requirement of neuroleptics and decreased in aggression | C |
TBI – Traumatic brain injury; MPH – Methylphenidate
Points to remember for treating psychiatrist in patients with traumatic brain injury
| • Assess level of consciousness of the patient. Do a GCS scoring (S) |
| • Enquire about post-TBI loss of consciousness, ENT bleed, seizures |
| • Try to understand the nature of problem. It may be different for the patient and the caregiver |
| • If possible, get a baseline neurocognitive assessment done. In absence of the same, do a MMSE (S) |
| • Go through neuroimaging and EEG reports |
| • Go through the medications which he/she is already on |
| • If patient underwent neurosurgery, go through the OT notes/discharge notes |
| • Mention your clinical diagnosis or at least the provisional diagnosis. It may be required later because of medico-legal issues associated with such cases (S) |
| • Choose medication in such a way that it covers neurological issue and psychiatric issue simultaneously e.g., in a patient with seizure and aggression following TBI one can choose valproate which will be effective for both the conditions (S) |
| • Always encourage healthy lifestyle, exercise and mental activities |
| • Assess for SUD. If present, treat it like a case of dual diagnosis |
GCS – Glasgow Coma Scale; ENT – Ear-nose-throat; MMSE – MiniMental State Examination; EEG – Electroencephalography; OT – Operation theater; SUD – Substance use disorders
Figure 1Flowchart of psychiatric management of a patient with traumatic brain injury