Inflammation and depression: why poststroke depression may be the norm and not the exception.

Int J Stroke. 2011 Apr;6(2):128-35. doi: 10.1111/j.1747-4949.2010.00565.x. Epub 2011 Jan 19.
Inflammation and depression: why poststroke depression may be the norm and not the exception.
Pascoe MC, Crewther SG, Carey LM, Crewther DP.
Source

Brain Sciences Institute, Swinburne University, Melbourne, Vic, Australia.
Abstract

Ischaemic stroke often precedes the appearance of clinical depression. Poststroke depression in turn influences the prognostic outcome. In the interest of advancing our understanding of the biological mechanisms underlying the development of poststroke depression, this systematic review explores the immunological processes driving the development of inflammation-related cell death in mood-related brain regions. Particular attention has been paid to cytokine-driven intrinsic apoptosis factors, including intracellular calcium, glutamate excitotoxicity and free radicals that appear in the brain following ischaemic damage and whose presence significantly increases the likelihood of clinically defined depression.

© 2011 The Authors. International Journal of Stroke © 2011 World Stroke Organization.
Comment in

* Int J Stroke. 2011 Dec;6(6):567-8.

PMID:
21371275
[PubMed – indexed for MEDLINE]

Maurice Preter, MD

About Maurice Preter MD

Maurice Preter, MD is a European and U.S. educated psychiatrist, psychotherapist, psychopharmacologist, neurologist, and medical-legal expert in private practice in Manhattan. He is also the principal of Fifth Avenue Concierge Medicine, PLLC, a medical concierge service and health advisory for select individuals and families.
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