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A sudden and severe depressive episode after a left cingulate gyrus stroke: a case report of post-stroke depression and review of literature

Journal

JOURNAL OF NEURAL TRANSMISSION
Volume 128, Issue 5, Pages 711-716

Publisher

SPRINGER WIEN
DOI: 10.1007/s00702-021-02334-y

Keywords

Stroke; Depression; Post-stroke depression; Cingulate gyrus

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Post-stroke depression is a common complication occurring within the first 6 months after stroke, leading to slower recovery, greater disability, and higher mortality rates. The pathophysiology is believed to involve contributions from both psychosocial and stroke-related factors. Early treatment has been shown to positively impact post-stroke rehabilitation outcomes and survival.
Post-stroke depression is a frequent complication of cerebrovascular lesions and mainly occurs within the first 6 months after stroke. Stroke patients who develop depression have slower recovery, greater disability, and higher mortality rates. The pathophysiology of post-stroke depression is not yet clearly defined, but studies suggest contributions from both psychosocial factors and stroke-related factors, such as lesions affecting the frontal-subcortical circuits. Early treatment has a positive impact on post-stroke rehabilitation outcome and survival. We present the case of an 82-year-old man with no psychiatric history who was brought to the psychiatric emergency department after two suicide attempts in the span of 7 days. He was severely depressed, with feelings of hopelessness, insomnia, and suicidal ideation. He had suffered a stroke the week before, affecting the anterior portion of the left cingulate gyrus, causing right hemiparesis and paresthesia. The psychiatric symptoms developed immediately after the stroke and were not present before the event. He was admitted to the psychiatry ward, treated with sertraline 100 mg/day and quetiapine 50 mg/day and discharged within 28 days, after full remission of symptoms. Our case strengthens the association between lesions located to the frontal-subcortical circuits and post-stroke depression. Physicians should be vigilant regarding the occurrence of depression in stroke patients, especially those who suffer lesions affecting the frontal-subcortical circuits and related regions.

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