Psychosis Secondary to Traumatic Brain Injury: Critical Literature Review and Illustrative Case Study

J. Regala, Francisco Moniz-Pereira, A.J. Bento
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Abstract

Psychosis secondary to traumatic brain injury (PSTBI) is rare yet a serious sequela of traumatic brain injury (TBI).We provide a critical literature review on PSTBI, outlining clinical features and approach to the diagnosis and treatment. Finally, we illustrate a case description, to discuss its conceptual framework. Conceptualizing PSTBI as a neurobiological syndrome has clinical relevance, insofar as, it facilitates a rational scheme, by which specific diagnostic dilemmas should be tackled in the workup, to provide a tailored treatment. Additionally, it may shed light on the understanding of psychotic disorders by integrating data on primary and secondary psychosis. TBI can contribute to the emergence of psychotic symptoms in various manners. It may precipitate psychosis in susceptible individuals, occur in a direct relationship to post‐traumatic epilepsy, or develop directly due to brain injury. It is this last clinical entity that we focus on in this article. Its neurobiological underpinnings comprise the following mechanisms: damage to frontal and temporal lobes (primary injury); structural and/or functional dysconnectivity in sensory‐ and other information‐ ‐processing networks, such as the Default‐Mode network, which stem from diffuse axonal injury (DAI) (primary injury); neuroinflammation and neurodegeneration (secondary injury). The clinical presentation may take two forms: delusional disorder or schizophrenia‐like psychosis. Both subtypesare often preceded by a prodromal phase superimposed on other sequelae, namely affective instability, social and occupational functional decline. In comparison to primary schizophrenia, PSTBI has a lower genetic load, fewer negative symptoms, more neurocognitive symptoms, which may be intertwined with frontal‐subcortical system dysfunction/ frontal syndromes and are more likely to present findings on neuroimaging and electroencephalographic studies. PSTBI has a bimodal distribution of onset. Latencies of under a year (early‐onset) have been associated with DAI and delusional disorder subtype. Schizophrenia‐like psychosis subtype usually develops after a latency of 1‐5 years (late‐onset), and has been more associated with epilepsy, focal brain lesions and a chronic course. Antipsychotics should be used cautiously considering the increased sensitivity to the sedating, anticholinergic, and seizure threshold‐lowering side effects. Late‐onset PSTBI might benefit from anticonvulsants, by virtue of its anti‐ ‐kindling properties. Additionally, further pharmacological approaches may be used to address cognitive, emotional, and behavioural issues.
创伤性脑损伤继发精神病:关键文献回顾和说明性案例研究
摘要外伤性脑损伤(PSTBI)继发精神病是一种罕见但严重的后遗症。我们提供了一个关键的文献综述PSTBI,概述临床特征和方法的诊断和治疗。最后,通过案例描述,探讨其概念框架。将PSTBI概念化为一种神经生物学综合征具有临床相关性,因为它有助于制定合理的方案,从而在检查中解决特定的诊断困境,以提供量身定制的治疗。此外,它可以通过整合原发性和继发性精神病的数据来阐明对精神障碍的理解。创伤性脑损伤可能以各种方式导致精神病症状的出现。它可能在易感个体中诱发精神病,与创伤后癫痫有直接关系,或直接由脑损伤引起。这是我们在这篇文章中关注的最后一个临床实体。其神经生物学基础包括以下机制:额叶和颞叶损伤(原发性损伤);感觉和其他信息处理网络(如默认模式网络)的结构和/或功能连接障碍,源于弥漫性轴索损伤(DAI)(原发性损伤);神经炎症和神经退行性变(继发性损伤)。临床表现可能有两种形式:妄想障碍或精神分裂症样精神病。这两种亚型通常都有前驱期叠加其他后遗症,即情感不稳定,社会和职业功能下降。与原发性精神分裂症相比,PSTBI具有较低的遗传负荷,较少的阴性症状,更多的神经认知症状,这些症状可能与额叶-皮质下系统功能障碍/额叶综合征交织在一起,并且更有可能在神经影像学和脑电图研究中出现发现。PSTBI发病呈双峰分布。潜伏期低于一年(早发)与DAI和妄想障碍亚型相关。精神分裂症样精神病亚型通常潜伏期为1 - 5年(迟发性),并且与癫痫、局灶性脑损伤和慢性病程更为相关。考虑到抗精神病药物对镇静、抗胆碱能和降低癫痫发作阈值的副作用的敏感性增加,应谨慎使用。晚发性PSTBI可能受益于抗惊厥药,由于其抗引燃特性。此外,进一步的药理学方法可用于解决认知、情绪和行为问题。
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