Zwil A S, McAllister T W, Cohen I, Halpern L R
Department of Psychiatry and Human Behavior, Jefferson Medical College and Thomas Jefferson University Hospital, Philadelphia, PA.
Brain Inj. 1993 Mar-Apr;7(2):147-52. doi: 10.3109/02699059309008168.
A young adult with no prior history of affective disease suffered the onset of a rapid cycling bipolar illness, marginally responsive to psychotropic medications, following a mild closed-head injury, and persisting after the cognitive effects of the injury had resolved. A concurrence of findings on the neurological examination, neurobehavioural examination, SPECT scan, EEG and neuropsychological test battery suggested the presence of a diffuse cerebral injury with a predominance of left frontotemporal findings. This case demonstrates that a severe and disabling mood disorder may follow a mild head injury, and that its course may be independent of cognitive impairment and recovery.