Psychopathologie des accidents vasculaires cérébraux [Psychopathology of stroke]

Détails

ID Serval
serval:BIB_35320
Type
Article: article d'un périodique ou d'un magazine.
Sous-type
Synthèse (review): revue aussi complète que possible des connaissances sur un sujet, rédigée à partir de l'analyse exhaustive des travaux publiés.
Collection
Publications
Institution
Titre
Psychopathologie des accidents vasculaires cérébraux [Psychopathology of stroke]
Périodique
Psychologie & neuropsychiatrie du vieillissement
Auteur⸱e⸱s
Carota A., Dieguez S., Bogousslavsky J.
ISSN
1760-1703 (Print)
ISSN-L
1760-1703
Statut éditorial
Publié
Date de publication
12/2005
Peer-reviewed
Oui
Volume
3
Numéro
4
Pages
235-249
Langue
français
Notes
Publication types: English Abstract ; Journal Article ; Review
Publication Status: ppublish
Résumé
The psychopathology of stroke encompasses several psychiatric and behavioral disorders that have high prevalence in the geriatric population, reduce the patient autonomy and increase the caregiver's burden. These disorders are usually associated with other cognitive and neurological deficits, and are labelled as neuropsychiatric when the whole clinical picture is consistent with the specific dysfunction of a neural system or brain region. Thus the neuropsychiatry of stroke comprises disorders of the perception/identification of the self and the environment (anosognosia of hemiplegia, misidentification syndromes, confabulations, visual hallucinations, delirium and acute confusional state), amotivational syndromes (apathy and athymhormia), disorders of emotional reactivity (blunted affect, emotional incontinence, irritability, catastrophic reactions), poor impulse or ideation control (mania) and personality changes. The clinical profile of the subcortical vascular dementia also points to specific brain dysfunction (frontal-subcortical pathways) that manifests with behavioral (depression, emotionalism, irritability) and cognitive symptoms (psychomotor retardation, attention, executive and memory deficits). However, post-stroke depression and anxiety, which have a more variable clinical presentation and might be assimilated, for several aspects, to post-traumatic or adaptive disorders, are disorders less characterized in their neural correlates.
Mots-clé
Aged/psychology, Behavior, Capgras Syndrome/etiology, Capgras Syndrome/psychology, Cognition Disorders/etiology, Cognition Disorders/psychology, Confusion/etiology, Confusion/psychology, Depression/etiology, Humans, Stroke/complications, Stroke/physiopathology, Stroke/psychology
Pubmed
Création de la notice
19/11/2007 13:33
Dernière modification de la notice
03/09/2019 6:10
Données d'usage