Open AccessJournal Article
Pharmacological treatment following experimental cerebral infarction: implications for understanding psychological symptoms of human stroke.
R G Robinson,Floyd E. Bloom +1 more
65
TL;DR: The results suggest that ischemic damage to the cerebral cortex which injures some axonal branches of elaborately arborizing catecholamine-containing neurons may alter the biochemical and functional state of the entire system in its intact collateral axons.
read more
About: This article is published in Biological Psychiatry. The article was published on 01 Oct 1977. and is currently open access. The article focuses on the topics: Stroke & Cerebral infarction.
read more
Chat with Paper
AI Agents for this Paper
Find similar papers on Google Scholar, PubMed and Arxiv
Write a critical review of this paper
Analyze citations of this paper to find unaddressed research gaps
Citations
The etiology of poststroke depression: a review of the literature and a new hypothesis involving inflammatory cytokines.
Gianfranco Spalletta,Paola Bossù,Antonio Ciaramella,Pietro Bria,Carlo Caltagirone,Robert G. Robinson +5 more
TL;DR: The evidence supporting the hypothesis that proinflammatory cytokines are involved in the occurrence of stroke as well as mood disorders linked to the brain damage is reviewed.
267
Risk Factors for Post-stroke Depression: A Meta-analysis
TL;DR: A history of mental illness was the highest ranking modifiable risk factor; other risk factors for PSD were female gender, age (<70 years), neuroticism, family history, severity of stroke, and level of handicap.
Apathy in Neuropsychiatric Disease: Diagnosis, Pathophysiology, and Treatment
TL;DR: Clinical, neuropathologic, and neuroimaging observations increasingly suggest that apathy reflects dysfunction of frontal-subcortical circuits, especially those linking the ventromedial prefrontal cortex to related regions in the basal ganglia.
147
Suction lesions of the frontal cerebral cortex in the rat induce asymmetrical behavioral and catecholaminergic responses.
TL;DR: Suction lesions of the right frontal cerebral cortex in rats induce a period of spontaneous hyperactivity, as measured by an increase in running wheel activity that began about one week post-operatively and continued throughout the remainder of a 30-day observation period as mentioned in this paper.
106
Brain-derived neurotrophic factor and post-stroke depression.
Eric Zhang,Ping Liao,Ping Liao +2 more
TL;DR: This review summarizes the current knowledge of BDNF in PSD and suggests a synergistic effect may be achieved when such treatments are applied together with existing antidepressants.
102