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Am J Psychiatry 117:1004-1009, May 1961
doi: 10.1176/appi.ajp.117.11.1004
© 1961 American Psychiatric Association
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BEHAVIORAL CHANGES IN PATIENTS WITH STROKES

MONTAGUE ULLMAN M.D., and ARNO GRUEN PH.D.1

1 The Second (Cornell) Medical and Neurological Service, Bellevue Hospital, New York City.

The individual who has had a stroke is reacting to a situation of stress that has many unique features. Patients who have experienced mild strokes with little or no residual mental impairment react to the stress in their own idiosyncratic fashion. Some will intergrate the experience successfully; others will become enmeshed in psychopathological manoeuvers of varying severity. In patients with moderate or severe brain damage, the situation is quite different. Here the unique features of the stroke are highlighted, the chief of these being that the very organ governing the adaptation to stress is itself impaired. The resulting clinical picture has to be evaluated now, not only in terms of what the experience means to the patient, but also in terms of the capacity the patient has for evaluating the situation.




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F. Ghika-Schmid, G. van Melle, P. Guex, and J. Bogousslavsky
Subjective experience and behavior in acute stroke: The Lausanne Emotion in Acute Stroke Study
Neurology, January 1, 1999; 52(1): 22 - 22.
[Abstract] [Full Text]




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