Aggressive Behavior in Patients With Stroke: Association With Psychopathology and Results of Antidepressant Treatment on Aggression
Abstract
Chan K-L, Campayo A, Moser DJ, Arndt S, Robinson RG. Aggressive behavior in patients with stroke: association with psychopathology and results of antidepressant treatment on aggression.
Objective
To examine, in a post hoc analysis of an antidepressant treatment trial, correlates of irritability and aggression after stroke and changes in irritability scores associated with antidepressant treatment.
Design
Aggressive patients (n=23) were compared with nonaggressive patients (n=69) on numerous measures of psychopathology, poststroke impairment, and neuroimaging findings.
Setting
All patients were hospitalized at the time of the initial evaluation for acute stroke or for rehabilitation therapy.
Participants
Ninety-two patients from the Iowa City Stroke Study were classified as aggressive or nonaggressive, based on symptoms elicited by the Present State Examination (PSE) and from family or caretaker reports.
Intervention
All patients were randomized to receive nortriptyline, fluoxetine, or placebo using a double-blind methodology.
Main Outcome Measure
The change in aggression score as elicited by the PSE at the beginning and the end of a 12-week treatment trial.
Results
Twenty-five percent (23/92) of patients reported irritability or aggression. Irritable and aggressive patients had higher total PSE scores, Hamilton Depression Rating Scale scores, Hamilton Anxiety Rating Scale (HAMA) scores, and lower Mini-Mental State Examination scores. They also had lesions that were more proximal to the frontal pole. Stepwise regression analysis showed that HAMA scores and proximity of lesion to the frontal pole were significant independent predictors of irritability. Among irritable and aggressive patients with depression who responded to antidepressants, there was a significantly greater reduction in irritability after treatment, compared with patients whose depression did not lessen with treatment.
Conclusions
Several factors, such as severity of impairment, other psychopathology, and neurobiologic factors, appear to contribute to irritable and aggressive behavior in stroke patients. If depression accompanies aggression, the results of this small study suggest that successful treatment of depression may reduce aggressive behavior.
aDepartment of Psychological Medicine, Tan Tock Seng Hospital, Singapore
bDepartment of Psychiatry, Hospital Clinico de Zaragoza, Zaragoza, Spain
cDepartment of Psychiatry, University of Iowa, Roy J. and Lucille A. Carver College of Medicine, Iowa City, IA
Reprint requests to Robert G. Robinson, MD, Dept of Psychiatry, University of Iowa, 200 Hawkins Dr, Iowa City, IA 52242
Supported in part by the National Institutes of Health (grant nos. MH52879, MH53592, MH63405).
No commercial party having a direct financial interest in the results of the research supporting this article has or will confer a benefit upon the author(s) or upon any organization with which the author(s) is/are associated.