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1.
Case Rep Med ; 2012: 736521, 2012.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23049569

ABSTRACT

Two cases of patients experienced subsyndromal depression after manic or mixed hypomanic and depressive episodes due to bipolar I (case 1) and II (case 2) disorders prior to the use of lamotrigine. Case 1 showed episodes of mood switching induced by antidepressants and seasonal mood instability. Case 2 showed hippocampal atrophy and a persistent dull headache that preceded the use of lamotrigine. Both were successfully treated with add-on lamotrigine therapy, and the dull headache was effectively treated with olanzapine. Both patients improved in social activity and work performance after these add-on treatments. Thus, add-on treatment with lamotrigine alone or in combination with olanzapine was an effective strategy to improve the quality of life in bipolar depression. Subsyndromal depression that present after the disappearance of the manic or mixed state was suggested to be practical indication for the use of lamotrigine.

2.
Clin Neuropharmacol ; 34(6): 260-1, 2011.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22104637

ABSTRACT

A 68-year-old woman showed obsessive thought that she could not remember the names of people or items that she saw. She repeatedly asked her husband to recall names of unspecified people and checked the garbage to find the names of items. The patient had a history of cerebral infarctions in the left middle cerebral artery regions 2 and 15 months before the emergence of her symptoms. A magnetic resonance imaging examination showed signs of an old infarction in the left basal ganglia and ischemic signs in the right temporal lobe. Her obsessive-compulsive symptoms relating to words were successfully treated with a serotonin selective reuptake inhibitor, paroxetine, at the dose of 40 mg/d. Her scores on the Yale-Brown Obsessive Compulsive Scale reduced from 31 to 8 points after this treatment. This case may suggest therapeutic modulation of language-related cortical activity elicited by paroxetine.


Subject(s)
Brain Infarction/diagnosis , Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder/diagnosis , Paroxetine/therapeutic use , Aged , Brain Infarction/complications , Brain Infarction/drug therapy , Female , Humans , Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder/drug therapy , Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder/etiology , Time Factors , Treatment Outcome
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