Moonyoung Jang, Minah Kim, Sunghyun Park, Ho Sung Myung, Sun Ha Paek, Jun Soo Kwon
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Objective: Obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD) is a psychiatric condition that causes significant distress and social costs and often follows a chronic course with frequent relapses. Approximately 20% of patients do not respond to medication or cognitive behavioral therapy; gamma knife surgery (GKS) has been proposed as a treatment option for these patients. However, research on GKS for OCD patients is rare.
Methods: In this study, 10 patients with treatment-resistant OCD underwent GKS, and the treatment response and side effects were assessed. The improvement in patients' obsessive-compulsive symptoms was evaluated using the Yale-Brown Obsessive Compulsive Scale (YBOCS) scores following GKS. Additionally, the characteristics distinguishing the groups with favorable responses to GKS from those with less favorable responses were examined.
Results: GKS was well tolerated, and patients demonstrated a statistically significant reduction in YBOCS scores before and after GKS (p=0.016). Patients that responded to GKS exhibited distinct characteristics from those who did not respond. Patients who responded poorly tended to present an earlier age of onset, a longer duration of illness, more frequent hospitalizations, poorer social functioning, and a greater incidence of suicide attempts/thoughts.
Conclusion: This study not only demonstrated that GKS is a safe and effective treatment method for intractable OCD but also revealed characteristics distinguishing patients who respond well to GKS from those who do not. These results may aid in the selection of patients for future application of GKS.
期刊介绍:
The Psychiatry Investigation is published on the 25th day of every month in English by the Korean Neuropsychiatric Association (KNPA). The Journal covers the whole range of psychiatry and neuroscience. Both basic and clinical contributions are encouraged from all disciplines and research areas relevant to the pathophysiology and management of neuropsychiatric disorders and symptoms, as well as researches related to cross cultural psychiatry and ethnic issues in psychiatry. The Journal publishes editorials, review articles, original articles, brief reports, viewpoints and correspondences. All research articles are peer reviewed. Contributions are accepted for publication on the condition that their substance has not been published or submitted for publication elsewhere. Authors submitting papers to the Journal (serially or otherwise) with a common theme or using data derived from the same sample (or a subset thereof) must send details of all relevant previous publications and simultaneous submissions. The Journal is not responsible for statements made by contributors. Material in the Journal does not necessarily reflect the views of the Editor or of the KNPA. Manuscripts accepted for publication are copy-edited to improve readability and to ensure conformity with house style.