Prevalence of pituitary dysfunction in psychiatric patients with mild head injuries

Traumatic brain injury (TBI) effects a large number of individuals, both civilians and military personnel, every year. The neuroinflammatory response mounted in the brain following a head injury continues long after the effects of initial subside. While it was initially thought to only occur in mode...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Healt, Nicholas
Other Authors: Dwyer, Brigid
Language:en_US
Published: 2021
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/2144/42153
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spelling ndltd-bu.edu-oai-open.bu.edu-2144-421532021-03-02T05:01:16Z Prevalence of pituitary dysfunction in psychiatric patients with mild head injuries Healt, Nicholas Dwyer, Brigid Weinstein, John Medicine Depression Mild traumatic brain injury mTBI Post-TBI hypopituitarism PTSD Traumatic brain injury Traumatic brain injury (TBI) effects a large number of individuals, both civilians and military personnel, every year. The neuroinflammatory response mounted in the brain following a head injury continues long after the effects of initial subside. While it was initially thought to only occur in moderate or severe TBI, the deleterious effects of this cascade have recently been identified in patients with mild TBI (mTBI). Hypopituitarism is an often underreported condition and can result from TBI of all severity. The long-term sequelae of TBI can manifest in or exacerbate many other comorbidities of brain injury, such as neuroendocrine dysfunction or mental health conditions. Both TBI and hypopituitarism can present with symptoms similar to some psychiatric disorders, or exacerbation comorbid conditions. Veteran patients presenting to their primary care providers with symptoms of irritability, depression, anxiety, or cognitive and behavioral changes may meet criteria to receive diagnoses of psychiatric illnesses prevalent in the military population, while not being evaluated for pituitary dysfunction, and thus receive inadequate treatment. The proposed study aims to identify the prevalence of patients that are receiving psychiatric treatment that have both a history of mTBI and reduced levels of pituitary hormones on serum assays. By identifying a significant portion of this population, future studies can assess the impact that hormonal replacement has on success of psychotherapy, resolution of symptoms, and impact on functional status, among other factors. 2021-02-26T16:02:29Z 2021-02-26T16:02:29Z 2020 2021-02-21T23:01:57Z Thesis/Dissertation https://hdl.handle.net/2144/42153 en_US Attribution 4.0 International http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
collection NDLTD
language en_US
sources NDLTD
topic Medicine
Depression
Mild traumatic brain injury
mTBI
Post-TBI hypopituitarism
PTSD
Traumatic brain injury
spellingShingle Medicine
Depression
Mild traumatic brain injury
mTBI
Post-TBI hypopituitarism
PTSD
Traumatic brain injury
Healt, Nicholas
Prevalence of pituitary dysfunction in psychiatric patients with mild head injuries
description Traumatic brain injury (TBI) effects a large number of individuals, both civilians and military personnel, every year. The neuroinflammatory response mounted in the brain following a head injury continues long after the effects of initial subside. While it was initially thought to only occur in moderate or severe TBI, the deleterious effects of this cascade have recently been identified in patients with mild TBI (mTBI). Hypopituitarism is an often underreported condition and can result from TBI of all severity. The long-term sequelae of TBI can manifest in or exacerbate many other comorbidities of brain injury, such as neuroendocrine dysfunction or mental health conditions. Both TBI and hypopituitarism can present with symptoms similar to some psychiatric disorders, or exacerbation comorbid conditions. Veteran patients presenting to their primary care providers with symptoms of irritability, depression, anxiety, or cognitive and behavioral changes may meet criteria to receive diagnoses of psychiatric illnesses prevalent in the military population, while not being evaluated for pituitary dysfunction, and thus receive inadequate treatment. The proposed study aims to identify the prevalence of patients that are receiving psychiatric treatment that have both a history of mTBI and reduced levels of pituitary hormones on serum assays. By identifying a significant portion of this population, future studies can assess the impact that hormonal replacement has on success of psychotherapy, resolution of symptoms, and impact on functional status, among other factors.
author2 Dwyer, Brigid
author_facet Dwyer, Brigid
Healt, Nicholas
author Healt, Nicholas
author_sort Healt, Nicholas
title Prevalence of pituitary dysfunction in psychiatric patients with mild head injuries
title_short Prevalence of pituitary dysfunction in psychiatric patients with mild head injuries
title_full Prevalence of pituitary dysfunction in psychiatric patients with mild head injuries
title_fullStr Prevalence of pituitary dysfunction in psychiatric patients with mild head injuries
title_full_unstemmed Prevalence of pituitary dysfunction in psychiatric patients with mild head injuries
title_sort prevalence of pituitary dysfunction in psychiatric patients with mild head injuries
publishDate 2021
url https://hdl.handle.net/2144/42153
work_keys_str_mv AT healtnicholas prevalenceofpituitarydysfunctioninpsychiatricpatientswithmildheadinjuries
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