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Severe apathy following
head injury:
Improvement with Selegiline (deprenyl) treatment.
Moutaouakil F, El Otmani H, Fadel H, Slassi I.
Service de neurologie,
hôpital Al-Kortobi, 90000 Tanger, Morocco
Neurochirurgie. 2008 Dec 10.
[Article in French]
Abstract
Apathy is defined as reduced
goal-directed behavior due to lack of motivation. Traumatic brain
injury is a frequent cause. Drugs activating the dopaminergic system
provide variable benefit. A 30-year-old patient was the victim
of a severe head injury with frontal bruise at the age of 15.
At the request of his family, he consulted for a 7-year history that
included a lack of initiative and the inability to generate behavior
spontaneously, contrasting with the ability to execute behaviors on
command. He also presented indifference, major emotional disruption
without sadness, pessimism, and other depressive signs.
The examination found a severe apathetic syndrome confirmed by
specific scales with a mild impairment of executive functions and
without depressive syndrome. Encephalic MRI showed atrophy of the
whole prefrontal cerebral cortex. The patient was treated with
bromocriptine, which he did not tolerate, then with
Selegiline (Deprenyl) at 15mg per day,
which dramatically improved his symptoms.
Apathy occurs frequently after traumatic brain injury, in 23-71% of
patients according to the authors. The pathophysiology of apathy has
been described in anatomical terms as related to disruption of
frontal-subcortical pathways. The biochemical hypothesis postulates
a disruption in dopaminergic activity. The use of dopaminergic
agents usually improves cases similar to our patient. Apathy
is frequent following head injury, warranting a search for
systematic causes. Since it increases dopaminergic activity,
Selegiline (Deprenyl) is well worth trying in these patients.
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