Table 1.
Psychiatric disorders | Prevalence | Etiological considerations | Clinical features | Treatment |
---|---|---|---|---|
Depression | 25-50% | Structural changes: | Most common symptoms: irritability, discouragement, memory and concentration problems, fatigue, insomnia and poor appetite | 1st line: SSRI |
2 to 5 times higher than GP | • Higher lesion load in the left arcuate fasciculus, prefrontal cortex, anterior temporal lobe and parietal lobe | 2nd line: SNRI, TCA, Mirtazapine CBT: mild to moderate depression | ||
• Shape variations of hippo campus; | Symptom overlap: fatigue, insomnia and cognitive dysfunction | ECT: last resort treatment | ||
• Changes in the cortico-striatal-pallido-thalamic loop | Suicidality: | |||
Neuroendocrine changes: | • Prevalence: | |||
• HPA axis dysfunction | - Suicidal ideation: 2.3 to 14 times higher than GP | |||
MS treatment: | - Suicide rate: 1.8-15.1% | |||
• INFβ: controversial issue | - Suicide risk: higher in the first 5 years after diagnosis; 50% of all suicides | |||
Psychosocial factors: | • Predictors: depression, social isolation and alcohol abuse | |||
• Coping mechanisms: | ||||
- Cognitive reframing: lower levels of depression | ||||
- Escape-avoidance and emotional respite: higher levels of depression | ||||
Anxiety disorders | Anxiety disorders: 13-31.7%; 3 times higher than GP | Structural: atrophy in the superior and middle gyri of the right frontal lobe | Symptom overlap between MS somatic manifestations and anxiety symptoms | 1st line: SSRI and CBT |
Alternative: SNRI | ||||
Anxiety symptoms: 26% to 63.4% | MS specific: injection anxiety | Anxiety and depression: | ||
• Increased physical complaints | ||||
• Social dysfunction | ||||
• Alcohol consumption | ||||
• Suicidal ideation | ||||
Precipitant of relapse in MS patients | ||||
Bipolar disorder | 5.8% | Structural: plaques in the temporal horn areas; periventricular white matter, corpus callosum, subcortical “white matter”, frontal and temporal lobes and right cerebellar peduncle | BD symptoms throughout the evolution of the illness: impulsivity; emotional lability may occur during exacerbations | Treatment of mania: mood stabilizers, antipsychotics and benzodiazepines |
Therapy: steroid therapy | Steroid-induced mania: lithium prophylaxis and reduction of steroid doses | |||
Psychotic disorders | Psychotic symptoms: 2 to 3 times higher than GP | Structural: medial temporal lobe; lesions in the periventricular white matter | Hallucinations and delusions (mostly paranoid), irritability/agitation, sleep disturbance, grandiosity, blunted affect, and rare symptoms like catatonia and transient catalepsy | Antipsychotics: clozapine, risperidone, ziprasidone, low-dose chlorpromazine |
Psychosis: 0.41-7.46% | Genetic: genetic markers of immune activation | Prophylactic use of lithium alongside corticosteroid therapy | ||
Schizophrenia: 0-7.4% | Therapy: corticosteroids; INFβ | |||
Personality disorders | 2.6% | Structural: orbital-frontal-subcortical circuits; cingular-anterior-subcortical circuits | More neurotic features and less empathic, agreeable and conscientious | Palliative medication and behavior modification strategies |
Substance misuse | Alcohol: 3.96–18.2% | Alcohol: potentiate mild cognitive deficit; decreased alcohol tolerance; aggravated neurological symptoms | Psychoeducational measures | |
Drug abuse: 2.5–7.4% | Cannabis use for symptom control | |||
Affect abnormalities | Pseudobulbar affect: 10% | Disconnection syndrome: loss of brainstem inhibition in a putative control center on crying and laughter | Alteration of affect not representing an underlying emotion, such as pathological crying/laughter | SSRI |
Dextromethorphan+quinidine |
GP: general population, HPA: hypothalamus-pituitary-adrenal, INFβ: interferon-beta, SSRI: selective serotonine reuptake inhibitors, SNRI: serotonine and norepinephrine reuptake inhibitors, TCA: tricyclic antidepressants, CBT: cognitive behavioral therapy, ECT: eletroconvulsivetherapy