Lally Jill, Galarneau David
The University of Queensland Medical School, Ochsner Clinical School, New Orleans, LA.
Department of Psychiatry, Ochsner Clinic Foundation, New Orleans, LA.
Ochsner J. 2023 Summer;23(2):167-171. doi: 10.31486/toj.22.0112.
Although some patients with primary brain lesions remain clinically asymptomatic, others may experience a range of symptoms, including headaches, seizures, focal neurological deficits, changes in baseline mental function, and psychiatric manifestations. Distinguishing between a primary psychiatric illness and symptoms of a primary central nervous system tumor can be especially difficult for patients with a history of mental illness. A major challenge in effectively treating patients with brain tumors is first obtaining the diagnosis. A 61-year-old female with a medical history significant for bipolar 1 disorder with psychotic features, generalized anxiety, and previous psychiatric hospitalization presented to the emergency department with worsening depressive symptoms and without focal neurologic deficits. She was initially placed on a physician's emergency certificate for grave disability, with anticipated discharge to a local inpatient psychiatric facility once she was stabilized. A frontal brain lesion, concerning for a meningioma, was found on magnetic resonance imaging and she was instead transferred to a tertiary center for urgent neurosurgical consultation. Bifrontal craniotomy with neoplasm excision was performed. The patient's postoperative course was uneventful, and continued symptom improvement was noted at the patient's 6- and 12-week postoperative visits. This patient's clinical course exemplifies the clinical ambiguity associated with brain tumors, the challenge of obtaining a timely diagnosis with nonspecific symptoms, and the importance of neuroimaging for patients presenting with atypical cognitive symptoms. This case report contributes to the literature about the psychiatric manifestations of brain lesions, especially in patients with concurrent mental health disorders.
虽然一些原发性脑病变患者临床上仍无症状,但其他患者可能会出现一系列症状,包括头痛、癫痫发作、局灶性神经功能缺损、基线心理功能改变以及精神症状。对于有精神疾病史的患者来说,区分原发性精神疾病和原发性中枢神经系统肿瘤的症状可能特别困难。有效治疗脑肿瘤患者的一个主要挑战是首先做出诊断。一名61岁女性,有双相I型障碍伴精神病性特征、广泛性焦虑症病史且曾有过精神科住院治疗,因抑郁症状加重且无局灶性神经功能缺损而就诊于急诊科。她最初因严重残疾被开具医生紧急证明,预计病情稳定后将转至当地住院精神科机构。磁共振成像发现额叶有一个可疑为脑膜瘤的脑病变,于是她被转至三级中心进行紧急神经外科会诊。进行了双额开颅肿瘤切除术。患者术后恢复顺利,术后6周和12周复诊时症状持续改善。该患者的临床病程体现了与脑肿瘤相关的临床模糊性、出现非特异性症状时及时诊断的挑战以及神经影像学对出现非典型认知症状患者的重要性。本病例报告为有关脑病变精神症状的文献做出了贡献,尤其是在合并精神健康障碍的患者中。