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Affective Illness After Stroke

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  03 January 2018

S. Ebrahim
Affiliation:
Nottingham University Medical School (St George's Hospital Medical School)
D. Barer
Affiliation:
Nottingham University Medical School
F. Nouri
Affiliation:
Nottingham University Medical School

Extract

Mood assessments were made after six months of 149 survivors taken from a register of all patients admitted to hospital with acute stroke. Using a General Health Questionnaire score of 12 or more as a criterion of important affective illness, its prevalence was 23%. There was no difference in risk of affective illness between left and right hemisphere strokes. Affective illness was strongly associated with functional ability, with limb weakness and with longer hospital stay in those with good functional recovery. Only 15% of those with high scores were receiving antidepressant drugs. The general practitioner is in the best position to detect psychiatric illness in stroke survivors; the use of mood rating scales such as the GHQ, in conjunction with clinical assessment may improve detection.

Type
Papers
Copyright
Copyright © The Royal College of Psychiatrists 

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