Comorbidity between neurological illness and psychiatric disorders
- PMID: 26898322
- DOI: 10.1017/S1092852915000929
Comorbidity between neurological illness and psychiatric disorders
Abstract
Psychiatric disorders are common in many neurological disorders, including epilepsy, migraine, Alzheimer's disease, Parkinson's disease, essential tremor, and stroke. These comorbidities increase disease burden and may complicate the treatment of the combined disorders. Initial studies of the comorbidity of psychiatric and neurological disorders were cross-sectional, and time order of the associations was impossible to elucidate. More recent work has clarified time associations between psychiatric disorders and neurological disorders, particularly in epilepsy and stroke where epidemiological evidence suggests that there is a bidirectional relationship. This article takes an epidemiological approach to understanding these relationships and focuses mostly on epilepsy. Although, these relationships are understood in many neurological disorders, routine screening for psychiatric disorders in neurological disorders is infrequent, mostly due to the lack of partnerships between psychiatrists and neurologists and the paucity of neuropsychiatrists. Much more needs to be done to improve the detection and treatment of patients affected by neurological and psychiatric disorders. Understanding the scope of this overlap may inspire collaborations to improve the lives of people affected by both disorders.
Keywords: Comorbidity; epidemiology; neurological disorders; psychiatric disorders.
Comment in
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A neuropsychiatric case report: Klüver-Bucy and Gastaut-Geschwind syndromes in one patient with schizoaffective disorder presenting with brain 99-mTc HMPAO single-photon emission computed tomography showing bilateral discrete decrease of temporal lobes perfusion.CNS Spectr. 2018 Dec;23(6):358-360. doi: 10.1017/S1092852917000712. Epub 2017 Oct 24. CNS Spectr. 2018. PMID: 29061200 No abstract available.
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