Medical School, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, MN, USA.
Department of Psychiatry, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, MN, USA.
Bipolar Disord. 2016 May;18(3):205-20. doi: 10.1111/bdi.12387. Epub 2016 Apr 26.
Approximately 3.5 million Americans will experience a manic episode during their lifetimes. The most common causes are psychiatric illnesses such as bipolar I disorder and schizoaffective disorder, but mania can also occur secondary to neurological illnesses, brain injury, or neurosurgical procedures.
For this narrative review, we searched Medline for articles on the association of mania with stroke, brain tumors, traumatic brain injury, multiple sclerosis, neurodegenerative disorders, epilepsy, and neurosurgical interventions. We discuss the epidemiology, features, and treatment of these cases. We also review the anatomy of the lesions, in light of what is known about the neurobiology of bipolar disorder.
The prevalence of mania in patients with brain lesions varies widely by condition, from <2% in stroke to 31% in basal ganglia calcification. Mania occurs most commonly with lesions affecting frontal, temporal, and subcortical limbic brain areas. Right-sided lesions causing hypo-functionality or disconnection (e.g., stroke; neoplasms) and left-sided excitatory lesions (e.g., epileptogenic foci) are frequently observed.
Secondary mania should be suspected in patients with neurological deficits, histories atypical for classic bipolar disorder, and first manic episodes after the age of 40 years. Treatment with antimanic medications, along with specific treatment for the underlying neurologic condition, is typically required. Typical lesion locations fit with current models of bipolar disorder, which implicate hyperactivity of left-hemisphere reward-processing brain areas and hypoactivity of bilateral prefrontal emotion-modulating regions. Lesion studies complement these models by suggesting that right-hemisphere limbic-brain hypoactivity, or a left/right imbalance, may be relevant to the pathophysiology of mania.
大约有 350 万美国人在其一生中会经历躁狂发作。最常见的病因是精神疾病,如双相情感障碍 I 型和分裂情感障碍,但躁狂也可能继发于神经疾病、脑损伤或神经外科手术。
在本次叙述性综述中,我们在 Medline 上搜索了与中风、脑肿瘤、创伤性脑损伤、多发性硬化症、神经退行性疾病、癫痫和神经外科干预相关的躁狂文章。我们讨论了这些病例的流行病学、特征和治疗。我们还根据对双相情感障碍神经生物学的了解,回顾了这些病变的解剖结构。
病变患者中躁狂的患病率因疾病而异,从中风中的<2%到基底节钙化中的 31%不等。躁狂最常发生于影响额叶、颞叶和皮质下边缘脑区的病变。右侧导致功能低下或断开(例如中风;肿瘤)和左侧兴奋性病变(例如致痫灶)的病变经常观察到。
应怀疑患有神经功能缺损、病史不典型的经典双相情感障碍和 40 岁以后首次躁狂发作的患者患有继发性躁狂。通常需要使用抗躁狂药物治疗,并针对潜在的神经系统疾病进行具体治疗。典型的病变位置与当前的双相情感障碍模型相符,该模型提示左半球奖励处理脑区的过度活跃和双侧前额情绪调节区域的活动低下。病变研究通过表明右半球边缘脑区的活动低下或左/右失衡可能与躁狂的病理生理学相关,补充了这些模型。