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Neuropsychological correlates of intractable anxiety disorder before and after capsulotomy
Authors:H. Nyman  P. Mindus
Abstract:A comprehensive neuropsychological test battery was administered to 10 consecutive patients undergoing neurosurgical intervention, capsulotomy, as a last resort treatment for chronic, incapacitating, and otherwise intractable illness, either obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD; n= 5) or non-OCD anxiety disorder (n= 5). The aim was to study the neuropsychology of severe anxiety disorders before and after a defined neurosurgical intersection of connections between the frontal lobes and related brain regions. Although extremely disabled by their illness before surgery, the patients performed within the normal range on most tests. After capsulotomy, there was significant improvement on measures of clinical morbidity and of psychosocial functioning, and the general neuropsychological performance remained remarkably intact. In a subgroup of 5 patients, however, perseverative responses were more common postoperatively, possibly indicating dysfunction of systems involving the frontal lobes. Although admittedly sparse, these data can be interpreted as suggesting that in vulnerable individuals, capsulotomy may give rise to increased perseverative behaviour in the laboratory, and possibly in the real world as well. This risk must be weighed against the potential clinical benefit of capsulotomy in this extremely disabled, sometimes suicidal patient population.
Keywords:neuropsychology  frontal lobe  psychiatric surgery  capsulotomy  anxiety disorder  obsessive-compulsive disorder
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