Literature DB >> 9413636

Psychiatric evaluation and outcomes in candidates for heart transplantation.

L Phipps1.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To describe the results of psychiatric evaluations and to describe psychiatric outcomes in patients in a heart transplantation program.
DESIGN: Descriptive study.
SETTING: Heart transplant unit at the Royal Victoria Hospital in Montreal from September 1984 to December 1995. PATIENTS: A total of 706 candidates for heart transplantation, of whom 226 received a graft.
INTERVENTIONS: All candidates underwent a psychiatric evaluation consisting of a semi-structured interview with mental status examination and diagnosis of mental disorders. OUTCOME MEASURES: Results of psychiatric evaluation and postoperative recovery and complications.
RESULTS: Twenty-eight candidates were found to be unsuitable for surgery because of psychiatric illness. The heart transplant recipients who had previously suffered from a psychiatric disorder fared worse than those who had not. The psychiatrist's recommendations for or against surgery depended on the patient's ability to cope with a number of stressors, including compliance with the medical regimen, the wait for a donor, the surgical procedure itself, adaptation to life with a new organ and the resolution of a distressing emotional state. Postoperative psychiatric complications ranged from organic mental syndromes to depression.
CONCLUSIONS: With the increase in the number of heart transplantations, the competition for organ donors is intensifying, and patient selection requires greater involvement of psychiatrists.

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Year:  1997        PMID: 9413636

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Clin Invest Med        ISSN: 0147-958X            Impact factor:   0.825


  1 in total

1.  Organ transplantation and discrimination. Treatment should be available to everyone.

Authors:  P Byrne
Journal:  BMJ       Date:  2000-06-10
  1 in total

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