Burden is a negative psychological state induced in caregivers by the demands of providing care to a person with an illness or a disability. Managing caregiver burden in Parkinson disease (PD) is significant because informal caregivers make a substantial contribution to the well-being of persons with PD, incurring financial, social, and personal losses. Failure to recognize and manage caregiver burden may lead to burnout and premature institutionalization of the person with PD. We conducted a comprehensive literature review to identify and summarize factors that may amplify burden, including motor and nonmotor symptoms of PD, caregiver psychiatric symptoms, and caregiver coping style. We review instruments designed to sample the construct of burden among caregivers and evaluate interventions that may reduce burden, either by directly targeting caregivers or by treating PD symptoms associated with burden. We aim to provide a concise synopsis of these issues for the clinician or researcher working with this population in order to facilitate recognition of caregiver burden, provide accurate assessment, administer appropriate interventions, and stimulate further research in this area.
Muscle dysmorphia is an emerging condition that primarily affects male bodybuilders. Such individuals obsess about being inadequately muscular. Compulsions include spending hours in the gym, squandering excessive amounts of money on ineffectual sports supplements, abnormal eating patterns or even substance abuse. In this essay, I illustrate the features of muscle dysmorphia by employing the first-person account of a male bodybuilder afflicted by this condition. I briefly outline the history of bodybuilding and examine whether the growth of this sport is linked to a growing concern with body image amongst males. I suggest that muscle dysmorphia may be a new expression of a common pathology shared with the eating disorders.
Deep brain stimulation of the subthalamic nucleus for Parkinson's disease is an established advanced therapy that addresses motor symptoms and improves quality of life. However, it has also been associated with neuropsychiatric symptoms such as impulsivity and hypomania. When significant, these symptoms can be distressing, necessitating psychiatric intervention. However, a comprehensive analysis of neurocognitive and neuropsychiatric outcomes with reference to the site of subthalamic stimulation has not been undertaken. We examined this matter in a consecutive sample of 64 persons with Parkinson's disease undertaking subthalamic deep brain stimulation. Participants were assessed with a battery of neuropsychiatric instruments at baseline and at repeated postoperative intervals. A psychiatrist identified patients with emergent, clinically-significant symptoms due to stimulation. The site of the active electrode contact and a simulated volume of activated tissue were evaluated with reference to putative limbic, associative and motor subregions of the subthalamic nucleus. We studied anatomical correlates of longitudinal neuropsychiatric change and delineated specific subthalamic regions associated with neuropsychiatric impairment. We tested the ability of these data to predict clinically-significant symptoms. Subthalamic stimulation within the right associative subregion was associated with inhibitory errors on the Excluded Letter Fluency task at 6-weeks (p = 0.023) and 13-weeks postoperatively (p = 0.0017). A cluster of subthalamic voxels associated with inhibitory errors was identified in the right associative and motor subregions. At 6-weeks, clinically-significant neuropsychiatric symptoms were associated with the distance of the active contact to the right associative subregion (p = 0.0026) and stimulation within the right associative subregion (p = 0.0009). At 13-weeks, clinically-significant symptoms were associated with the distance to the right (p = 0.0027) and left (p = 0.0084) associative subregions and stimulation within the right associative subregion (p = 0.0026). Discrete clusters of subthalamic voxels associated with high and low likelihood of postoperative neuropsychiatric symptoms were identified in ventromedial and dorsolateral zones, respectively. When a classifier was trained on these data, clinically-significant symptoms were predicted with an accuracy of 79%. These data underscore the importance of accurate electrode targeting, contact selection and device programming to reduce postoperative neuropsychiatric impairment. The ability to predict neuropsychiatric symptoms based on subthalamic data may permit anticipation and prevention of these occurrences, improving safety and tolerability.
Objective: Subthalamic nucleus deep brain stimulation (STN-DBS) in Parkinson's disease (PD) not only stimulates focal target structures but also affects distributed brain networks. The impact this network modulation has on non-motor DBS effects is not well-characterized. By focusing on the affective domain, we systematically investigate the impact of electrode placement and associated structural connectivity on changes in depressive symptoms following STN-DBS, which have been reported to improve, worsen, or remain unchanged. Methods: Depressive symptoms before and after STN-DBS surgery were documented in 116 patients with PD from 3 DBS centers (Berlin, Queensland, and Cologne). Based on individual electrode reconstructions, the volumes of tissue activated (VTAs) were estimated and combined with normative connectome data to identify structural connections passing through VTAs. Berlin and Queensland cohorts formed a training and cross-validation dataset used to identify structural connectivity explaining change in depressive symptoms. The Cologne data served as the test-set for which depressive symptom change was predicted. Results: Structural connectivity was linked to depressive symptom change under STN-DBS. An optimal connectivity map trained on the Berlin cohort could predict changes in depressive symptoms in Queensland patients and vice versa. Furthermore, the joint training-set map predicted changes in depressive symptoms in the independent test-set. Worsening of depressive symptoms was associated with left prefrontal connectivity. Interpretation: Fibers connecting the electrode with left prefrontal areas were associated with worsening of depressive symptoms. Our results suggest that for the left STN-DBS lead, placement impacting fibers to left prefrontal areas should be avoided to maximize improvement of depressive symptoms.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.
hi@scite.ai
10624 S. Eastern Ave., Ste. A-614
Henderson, NV 89052, USA
Copyright © 2024 scite LLC. All rights reserved.
Made with 💙 for researchers
Part of the Research Solutions Family.