J Stroke.  2016 Sep;18(3):244-255. 10.5853/jos.2016.01144.

Post-stroke Mood and Emotional Disturbances: Pharmacological Therapy Based on Mechanisms

Affiliations
  • 1Department of Neurology, University of Ulsan, Asan Medical Center, Seoul, Korea. jongskim@amc.seoul.kr

Abstract

Post-stroke mood and emotional disturbances are frequent and diverse in their manifestations. Out of the many post-stroke disturbances, post-stroke depression, post-stroke anxiety, post-stroke emotional incontinence, post-stroke anger proneness, and post-stroke fatigue are frequent and important symptoms. These symptoms are distressing for both the patients and their caregivers, and negatively influence the patient's quality of life. Unfortunately, these emotional disturbances are not apparent and are therefore often unnoticed by busy clinicians. Their phenomenology, predicting factors, and pathophysiology have been under-studied, and are under-recognized. In addition, well-designed clinical trials regarding these symptoms are rare. Fortunately, these mood and emotional disturbances may be treated or prevented by various methods, including pharmacological therapy. To administer the appropriate therapy, we have to understand the phenomenology and the similarities and differences in the pathophysiological mechanisms associated with these emotional symptoms. This narrative review will describe some of the most common or relevant post-stroke mood and emotional disturbances. The phenomenology, factors or predictors, and relevant lesion locations will be described, and pharmacological treatment of these emotional disturbances will be discussed based on presumable pathophysiological mechanisms.

Keyword

Stroke; Depression; Emotion; Serotonin; Treatment

MeSH Terms

Affective Symptoms*
Anger
Anxiety
Caregivers
Depression
Fatigue
Humans
Quality of Life
Serotonin
Stroke
Serotonin
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