The Association of Illness Severity, Self-Reported Cognitive Impairment, and Perceived Illness Management with Depression and Anxiety in a Multiple Sclerosis Clinic Population

2007 ◽  
Vol 30 (2) ◽  
pp. 177-186 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kristin Lester ◽  
Lara Stepleman ◽  
Mary Hughes
Author(s):  
Philip Cowen ◽  
Paul Harrison ◽  
Tom Burns

In this chapter we cover the range of disorders conventionally considered under the heading of neuropsychiatry, which include delirium—acute, generalized cognitive impairment in the setting of altered consciousness, dementia—chronic, generalized cognitive impairment in clear consciousness, (as with delirium, the syndrome of dementia can be caused by many separate disease processes (this chapter covers the clinical features and aetiology of dementia)), amnestic (or amnesic) syndromes— circumscribed deficits in memory, epilepsy, head injury, other neuropsychiatric disorders, including focal cerebral syndromes, infections, tumours, and multiple sclerosis, and secondary or symptomatic neuropsychiatric disorders—disorders such as depression and anxiety which, in particular cases can be attributed directly to a neuropsychiatric cause (e.g. psychosis due to cerebral vasculitis).


2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (4) ◽  
pp. 442
Author(s):  
Emilio Portaccio ◽  
Ermelinda De Meo ◽  
Angelo Bellinvia ◽  
Maria Pia Amato

Multiple sclerosis (MS) is one of the leading causes of disability in young adults. The onset of MS during developmental age makes pediatric patients particularly susceptible to cognitive impairment, resulting from both disease-related damage and failure of age-expected brain growth. Despite different test batteries and definitions, cognitive impairment has been consistently reported in approximately one-third of pediatric patients with MS. However, the lack of a uniform definition of cognitive impairment and the adoption of different test batteries have led to divergent results in terms of cognitive domains more frequently affected across the cohorts explored. This heterogeneity has hampered large international collaborative studies. Moreover, research aimed at the identification of risk factors (e.g., demographic, clinical, and radiological features) or protective factors (e.g., cognitive reserve, leisure activities) for cognitive decline is still scanty. Mood disorders, such as depression and anxiety, can be detected in these patients alongside cognitive decline or in isolation, and can negatively affect quality of life scores as well as academic performances. By using MRI, cognitive impairment was attributed to damage to specific brain compartments as well as to abnormal network activation patterns. However, multimodal MRI studies are still needed in order to assess the contribution of each MRI metric to cognitive impairment. Importantly, longitudinal studies have recently demonstrated failure of age-expected brain growth and of white matter (WM) and gray matter (GM) maturation plays a relevant role in determining cognitive dysfunction, in addition to MS-related direct damage. Whether these growth retardations might result in specific cognitive profiles according to the age at disease onset has not been studied, yet. A better characterization of cognitive profiles in pediatric MS patients, as well as the definition of neuroanatomical substrates of cognitive impairment and their longitudinal evolution are needed to develop efficient therapeutic strategies against cognitive impairment in this patient population.


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