Anika Balse, Christine N Smith, William Drew, Shahrokh Golshan, Hossein Ansari, Ameer Chaudry, Ananth Karanam, Mohammed Ahmed
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Objective: Persistent headache is the most common and debilitating chronic condition after traumatic brain injury (TBI), affecting mood and reducing quality of life. The investigators examined in a community-based setting whether repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation (rTMS) for management of major depression among outpatients with TBI histories was associated with improvement in the functional impact of headache (FH) and whether improvements were related to treatment at a specific site in the dorsolateral prefrontal cortex (DLPFC).
Methods: In the discovery phase (posttraumatic headache 1 [PTH-1] group, N=21), the association of rTMS treatment at DLPFC targets and improvement in headache and depression and anxiety were studied. Associations between functional connectivity of the patient-specific TMS treatment sites and changes in patients' FH were used to identify a target for simultaneous treatment of behavioral and headache symptoms. Patients in the translational phase (PTH-2 group, N=7) received TMS treatment at this target.
Results: The patients in the PTH-1 group had significant improvements in depression and anxiety but not FH, and more than half had a reduction in FH and reported an improvement in headache severity and duration. Increased functional connectivity between TMS sites and a subregion in the left DLPFC and bilateral precuneus was related to improved FH. Unlike the PTH-1 group, the PTH-2 group exhibited significant reductions in FH after 4 weeks of treatment and in anxiety and depression after 1-2 weeks of treatment.
Conclusions: TMS treatment targeting the left DLPFC coordinate identified in this study may help improve treatment for both FH and anxiety and depression among PTH patients.
期刊介绍:
As the official Journal of the American Neuropsychiatric Association, the premier North American organization of clinicians, scientists, and educators specializing in behavioral neurology & neuropsychiatry, neuropsychology, and the clinical neurosciences, the Journal of Neuropsychiatry and Clinical Neurosciences (JNCN) aims to publish works that advance the science of brain-behavior relationships, the care of persons and families affected by neurodevelopmental, acquired neurological, and neurodegenerative conditions, and education and training in behavioral neurology & neuropsychiatry. JNCN publishes peer-reviewed articles on the cognitive, emotional, and behavioral manifestations of neurological conditions, the structural and functional neuroanatomy of idiopathic psychiatric disorders, and the clinical and educational applications and public health implications of scientific advances in these areas. The Journal features systematic reviews and meta-analyses, narrative reviews, original research articles, scholarly considerations of treatment and educational challenges in behavioral neurology & neuropsychiatry, analyses and commentaries on advances and emerging trends in the field, international perspectives on neuropsychiatry, opinions and introspections, case reports that inform on the structural and functional bases of neuropsychiatric conditions, and classic pieces from the field’s rich history.