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CASE Angry and depressed

Y is a 16-year-old male who presents with his mother to our clinic for medication evaluation because of anger issues and problems learning in school. He says he has been feeling depressed for several months and noticed significant irritability. Y sleeps excessively, sometimes for more than 12 hours a day, and eats more than he usually does. He reports feeling hopeless, helpless, and guilty for letting his family down. Y, who is in the 10th grade, acknowledges trouble focusing and concentrating but attributed this to a previous diagnosis of attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD). He stopped taking his stimulant medication several months ago because he did not like taking it. He denies thoughts of self-harm or thinking about death.

Y’s mother reports that her son had been athletic but had to stop playing football because he has had 5 concussions. Y’s inability to play sports appears to be a precipitating factor in his decline in mood (Box). He had his first concussion at age 13; the last one was several months before his presenting to the clinic. Y experienced loss of consciousness and unsteady gait after his concussions and was hospitalized for some of them. Y says his life goals are “playing sports and being a marine,” which may be compromised because of his head injuries.

His mother reports Y is having more anger outbursts and says his personality is changing. Y viewed this change as just being more assertive and fails to see that others may be scared by his behavior. He is getting into more fights at school and is more impulsive and unpredictable, according to his mother. Y is struggling in school with cognitive deficits and memory problems; his grade point average (GPA) drops from 3.5 to 0.3 over several months. He had been homeschooled initially because of uncontrolled impulsivity and aggression, but was reintegrated to public school. Y has a history of a mathematics disorder but had done well without school accommodations before the head injuries. Lack of access to his peers and poor self-esteem because of his declining grades are making his mood worse. He denies a history of substance use and his urine drug screen is negative.

Recently, Y’s grandfather, with whom he had been close, died and 2 friends were killed in car accidents in the last few years. Y has no history of psychiatric hospitalization. He had seen a psychotherapist for depression. He had been on lisdexamfetamine, 30 mg/d, citalopram, 10 mg/d, and an unknown dose of dextroamphetamine. He had no major medical comorbidities. He lives with his mother. His parents are separated but he has frequent contact with his father. His developmental history is unremarkable. There was a questionable family history of schizophrenia, “nervous breakdowns,” depression, and bipolar disorder. There was no family history of suicide.

On his initial mental status examination, Y appears to be his stated age and is dressed appropriately. He is well dressed, suggesting that he puts a lot of care into his personal appearance. He is alert and oriented. He is cooperative and has fair eye contact. His gait is normal and no motor abnormalities are evident. His speech is normal in rate, rhythm, and volume. He can remember events with great accuracy. He reports that his mood is depressed and “down.” His affect appears irritable and he has low frustration tolerance, especially towards his mother. He is easy to anger but is re-directable. He does not endorse thoughts of suicidality or harm to others. He denies auditory or visual hallucinations, and paranoia. He does not appear to be responding to internal stimuli. His judgment and insight are fair.

What would be your diagnosis at this point?

a) major depressive disorder

b) oppositional defiant disorder

c) bipolar disorder, most recent episode depressed

d) ADHD, untreated

e) post-concussion syndrome

The authors' observations

Traumatic brain injury (TBI) affects 1.7 to 3.8 million people in the United States. More than 473,000 children present to the emergency room annually with TBI, approximately 75% of whom are given a label of mild TBI in the United States.1-3 TBI patients present with varying degrees of problems ranging from headaches to cognitive deficits and death. Symptoms may be transient or permanent.4 Prepubescent children are at higher risk and are more likely to sustain permanent damage post-TBI, with problems in attention, executive functioning, memory, and cognition.5-7

Prognosis depends on severity of injury and environmental factors, including socioeconomic status, family dysfunction, and access to resources.8 Patients may present during the acute concussion phase with physical symptoms, such as headaches, nausea, vomiting, sensitivity to light and sounds, and memory deficits, and psychiatric complaints such as anger, irritability, and mood swings. Symptoms may persist post-concussion, leading to problems in personal relationships and social and occupational functioning, and neuropsychiatric manifestations, including changes in personality, depression, suicidal thoughts, and substance dependence. As seen in this case, Y had neuropsychiatric manifestations after his TBI but other factors, such as his ADHD diagnosis and the death of his grandfather and friends, may have contributed to his presentation.

 

 

Up to one-half of children with brain injuries may be at increased risk for unfavorable behavioral outcomes, which include internalizing and externalizing presentations.9 These behavioral problems may emerge several years after the injury and often persist or get worse with time. Behavioral functioning before injury usually dictates long-term outcomes post injury. The American Academy of Neurology recently released guidelines for the assessment and treatment of athletes with concussions (see Related Resources).

TREATMENT Restart medication

We restart Y on citalopram, 10 mg/d, which he tolerated in the past, and increase it to 20 mg/d after 4 days to address his depression and irritability. He also is restarted on lisdexamfetamine, 30 mg/d, for his ADHD. We give his mother the Child Behavior Checklist and Teacher’s Report Forms to gather additional collateral information. We ask Y to follow up in 1 month and we encourage him to continue seeing his psychotherapist.

Which test(s) would you order?

a) neuropsychological testing

b) neurology referral

c) imaging studies

d) no testing

EVALUATION Testing

Although Y denies feeling depressed to the neuropsychologist, the examiner notes her concerns about his depression based on his mental status examination during testing.

Neuropsychological testing reveals a discrepancy noted between normal verbal skills and perceptual intellectual skills that were in the borderline range (Table). Testing revealed results supporting executive dysfunction and distractibility, which are consistent with his history of ADHD. Y’s broad reading scores are in the 20th percentile and math scores in the 30th percentile. Although he has a history of a mathematics disorder, his reading deficits are considered a decline compared with his previous performance.

The authors' observations

Y is a 16-year-old male who presented with anger, depression, and academic problems. He had genetic loading with a questionable family history of schizophrenia, “nervous breakdowns,” depression, and bipolar disorder. Other than his concussions, Y was healthy, however, he had pre-morbid, untreated ADHD. He was doing well academically until his concussions, after which he started to see a steep decline in his grades. He was struggling with low self-esteem, which affected his mood. Multiple contributors perpetuated his difficulties, including, his inability to play sports; being home-schooled; removal from his friends; deaths of close friends and family; and a concern that his medical limitation to refrain from physical activities was affecting his career ambitions, contributing to his sense of hopelessness.

Y responded well to the stimulant and antidepressant, but it is important to note the increased risk of non-compliance in teenagers, even when they report seemingly minor side effects, despite doing well clinically. Y required frequent psychiatric follow up and repeat neuropsychological evaluation to monitor his progress.

OUTCOME Back on the playing field

At Y’s 1 month follow up, he reports feeling less depressed but citalopram, 20 mg/d, makes him feel “plain.” His GPA increases to 2.5 and he completes 10th grade. Lisdexamfetamine is titrated to 60 mg/d, he is focusing at school, and his anger is better controlled. Y’s mother is hesitant to change any medications because of her son’s overall improvement.

A few weeks before his next follow up appointment, Y’s mother calls stating that his depression is worse as he has not been taking citalopram because he doesn’t like how it makes him feel. He is started on fluoxetine, 10 mg/d. At his next appointment, Y says that he tolerates fluoxetine. His mood improves substantially and he is doing much better. Y’s mother says she feel that her son is more social, smiling more, and sleeping and eating better.

Several months after Y’s school performance, mood, and behaviors improve, his physicians give him permission to play non-contact sports. He is excited to play baseball. Because of his symptoms, we recommend continuing treating his ADHD and depressive symptoms and monitoring the need for medication. We discussed with Y nonpharmacotherapeutic options, including access to an individualized education plan at school, individual therapy, and formalized cognitive training.

Bottom Line

Traumatic brain injury (TBI) affects children and adults with long-term sequelae, which affects outcomes. Outcome is dependent on several risk factors. Many patients with TBI also suffer from neuropsychiatric symptoms that affect their functioning at home and in social and occupational settings. Those with premorbid psychiatric conditions need to be closely monitored because they may be at greater risk for problems with mood and executive function. Treatment should be targeted to individual complaints.

Related Resources

  • Giza CC, Kutcher JS, Ashwal S, et al. Summary of evidence-based guideline update: evaluation and management of concussion in sports: report of the Guideline Development Subcommittee of the American Academy of Neurology. Neurology. 2013;80(24): 2250-2257.
  • Reardon CL, Factor RM. Sport psychiatry: a systematic review of diagnosis and medical treatment of mental illness in athletes. Sports Med. 2010;40(11):961-980.
 

 

Drug Brand Names

Citalopram • Celexa            Dextroamphetamine • Adderall

Fluoxetine • Prozac             Lisdexamfetamine dimesylate • Vyvanse

Disclosure

The authors report no financial relationships with any company whose products are mentioned in this article or with manufacturers of competing products.

References



1. Jager TE, Weiss HB, Coben JH, et al. Traumatic brain injuries evaluated in US emergency departments, 1992-1994. Acad Emerg Med. 2000;7(2):134-140.
2. Committee on Quality Improvement American Academy of Pediatrics; Commission on Clinical Policies and Research American Academy of Family Physicians. The management of minor closed head injury in children. Pediatrics. 1999;104(6):1407-1415.
3. Koepsell TD, Rivara FP, Vavilala MS, et al. Incidence and descriptive epidemiologic features of traumatic brain injury in King County, Washington. Pediatrics. 2011;128(5):946-954.
4. Sahler CS, Greenwald BD. Traumatic brain injury in sports: a review [published online July 9, 2012]. Rehabil Res Pract. 2012;2012:659652. doi: 10.1155/2012/659652.
5. Crowe L, Babl F, Anderson V, et al. The epidemiology of paediatric head injuries: data from a referral centre in Victoria, Australia. J Paediatr Child Health. 2009;45(6):346-350.
6. Anderson V, Catroppa C, Morse S, et al. Intellectual outcome from preschool traumatic brain injury: a 5-year prospective, longitudinal study. Pediatrics. 2009;124(6):e1064-1071.
7. Jaffe KM, Fay GC, Polissar NL, et al. Severity of pediatric traumatic brain injury and neurobehavioral recovery at one year—a cohort study. Arch Phys Med Rehabil. 1993; 74(6):587-595.
8. Anderson VA, Catroppa C, Dudgeon P, et al. Understanding predictors of functional recovery and outcome 30 months following early childhood head injury. Neuropsychology. 2006;20(1):42-57.
9. Li L, Liu J. The effect of pediatric traumatic brain injury on behavioral outcomes: a systematic review. Dev Med Child Neurol. 2013;55(1):37-45.

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Ravi Shankar, MD
Fellow
Child and Adolescent Psychiatry


Lauren Swager, MD
Assistant Professor
Department of Behavioral Medicine and Psychiatry

West Virginia University
Morgantown, West Virginia

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Current Psychiatry - 12(11)
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Ravi Shankar, MD
Fellow
Child and Adolescent Psychiatry


Lauren Swager, MD
Assistant Professor
Department of Behavioral Medicine and Psychiatry

West Virginia University
Morgantown, West Virginia

Author and Disclosure Information

Ravi Shankar, MD
Fellow
Child and Adolescent Psychiatry


Lauren Swager, MD
Assistant Professor
Department of Behavioral Medicine and Psychiatry

West Virginia University
Morgantown, West Virginia

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Related Articles

CASE Angry and depressed

Y is a 16-year-old male who presents with his mother to our clinic for medication evaluation because of anger issues and problems learning in school. He says he has been feeling depressed for several months and noticed significant irritability. Y sleeps excessively, sometimes for more than 12 hours a day, and eats more than he usually does. He reports feeling hopeless, helpless, and guilty for letting his family down. Y, who is in the 10th grade, acknowledges trouble focusing and concentrating but attributed this to a previous diagnosis of attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD). He stopped taking his stimulant medication several months ago because he did not like taking it. He denies thoughts of self-harm or thinking about death.

Y’s mother reports that her son had been athletic but had to stop playing football because he has had 5 concussions. Y’s inability to play sports appears to be a precipitating factor in his decline in mood (Box). He had his first concussion at age 13; the last one was several months before his presenting to the clinic. Y experienced loss of consciousness and unsteady gait after his concussions and was hospitalized for some of them. Y says his life goals are “playing sports and being a marine,” which may be compromised because of his head injuries.

His mother reports Y is having more anger outbursts and says his personality is changing. Y viewed this change as just being more assertive and fails to see that others may be scared by his behavior. He is getting into more fights at school and is more impulsive and unpredictable, according to his mother. Y is struggling in school with cognitive deficits and memory problems; his grade point average (GPA) drops from 3.5 to 0.3 over several months. He had been homeschooled initially because of uncontrolled impulsivity and aggression, but was reintegrated to public school. Y has a history of a mathematics disorder but had done well without school accommodations before the head injuries. Lack of access to his peers and poor self-esteem because of his declining grades are making his mood worse. He denies a history of substance use and his urine drug screen is negative.

Recently, Y’s grandfather, with whom he had been close, died and 2 friends were killed in car accidents in the last few years. Y has no history of psychiatric hospitalization. He had seen a psychotherapist for depression. He had been on lisdexamfetamine, 30 mg/d, citalopram, 10 mg/d, and an unknown dose of dextroamphetamine. He had no major medical comorbidities. He lives with his mother. His parents are separated but he has frequent contact with his father. His developmental history is unremarkable. There was a questionable family history of schizophrenia, “nervous breakdowns,” depression, and bipolar disorder. There was no family history of suicide.

On his initial mental status examination, Y appears to be his stated age and is dressed appropriately. He is well dressed, suggesting that he puts a lot of care into his personal appearance. He is alert and oriented. He is cooperative and has fair eye contact. His gait is normal and no motor abnormalities are evident. His speech is normal in rate, rhythm, and volume. He can remember events with great accuracy. He reports that his mood is depressed and “down.” His affect appears irritable and he has low frustration tolerance, especially towards his mother. He is easy to anger but is re-directable. He does not endorse thoughts of suicidality or harm to others. He denies auditory or visual hallucinations, and paranoia. He does not appear to be responding to internal stimuli. His judgment and insight are fair.

What would be your diagnosis at this point?

a) major depressive disorder

b) oppositional defiant disorder

c) bipolar disorder, most recent episode depressed

d) ADHD, untreated

e) post-concussion syndrome

The authors' observations

Traumatic brain injury (TBI) affects 1.7 to 3.8 million people in the United States. More than 473,000 children present to the emergency room annually with TBI, approximately 75% of whom are given a label of mild TBI in the United States.1-3 TBI patients present with varying degrees of problems ranging from headaches to cognitive deficits and death. Symptoms may be transient or permanent.4 Prepubescent children are at higher risk and are more likely to sustain permanent damage post-TBI, with problems in attention, executive functioning, memory, and cognition.5-7

Prognosis depends on severity of injury and environmental factors, including socioeconomic status, family dysfunction, and access to resources.8 Patients may present during the acute concussion phase with physical symptoms, such as headaches, nausea, vomiting, sensitivity to light and sounds, and memory deficits, and psychiatric complaints such as anger, irritability, and mood swings. Symptoms may persist post-concussion, leading to problems in personal relationships and social and occupational functioning, and neuropsychiatric manifestations, including changes in personality, depression, suicidal thoughts, and substance dependence. As seen in this case, Y had neuropsychiatric manifestations after his TBI but other factors, such as his ADHD diagnosis and the death of his grandfather and friends, may have contributed to his presentation.

 

 

Up to one-half of children with brain injuries may be at increased risk for unfavorable behavioral outcomes, which include internalizing and externalizing presentations.9 These behavioral problems may emerge several years after the injury and often persist or get worse with time. Behavioral functioning before injury usually dictates long-term outcomes post injury. The American Academy of Neurology recently released guidelines for the assessment and treatment of athletes with concussions (see Related Resources).

TREATMENT Restart medication

We restart Y on citalopram, 10 mg/d, which he tolerated in the past, and increase it to 20 mg/d after 4 days to address his depression and irritability. He also is restarted on lisdexamfetamine, 30 mg/d, for his ADHD. We give his mother the Child Behavior Checklist and Teacher’s Report Forms to gather additional collateral information. We ask Y to follow up in 1 month and we encourage him to continue seeing his psychotherapist.

Which test(s) would you order?

a) neuropsychological testing

b) neurology referral

c) imaging studies

d) no testing

EVALUATION Testing

Although Y denies feeling depressed to the neuropsychologist, the examiner notes her concerns about his depression based on his mental status examination during testing.

Neuropsychological testing reveals a discrepancy noted between normal verbal skills and perceptual intellectual skills that were in the borderline range (Table). Testing revealed results supporting executive dysfunction and distractibility, which are consistent with his history of ADHD. Y’s broad reading scores are in the 20th percentile and math scores in the 30th percentile. Although he has a history of a mathematics disorder, his reading deficits are considered a decline compared with his previous performance.

The authors' observations

Y is a 16-year-old male who presented with anger, depression, and academic problems. He had genetic loading with a questionable family history of schizophrenia, “nervous breakdowns,” depression, and bipolar disorder. Other than his concussions, Y was healthy, however, he had pre-morbid, untreated ADHD. He was doing well academically until his concussions, after which he started to see a steep decline in his grades. He was struggling with low self-esteem, which affected his mood. Multiple contributors perpetuated his difficulties, including, his inability to play sports; being home-schooled; removal from his friends; deaths of close friends and family; and a concern that his medical limitation to refrain from physical activities was affecting his career ambitions, contributing to his sense of hopelessness.

Y responded well to the stimulant and antidepressant, but it is important to note the increased risk of non-compliance in teenagers, even when they report seemingly minor side effects, despite doing well clinically. Y required frequent psychiatric follow up and repeat neuropsychological evaluation to monitor his progress.

OUTCOME Back on the playing field

At Y’s 1 month follow up, he reports feeling less depressed but citalopram, 20 mg/d, makes him feel “plain.” His GPA increases to 2.5 and he completes 10th grade. Lisdexamfetamine is titrated to 60 mg/d, he is focusing at school, and his anger is better controlled. Y’s mother is hesitant to change any medications because of her son’s overall improvement.

A few weeks before his next follow up appointment, Y’s mother calls stating that his depression is worse as he has not been taking citalopram because he doesn’t like how it makes him feel. He is started on fluoxetine, 10 mg/d. At his next appointment, Y says that he tolerates fluoxetine. His mood improves substantially and he is doing much better. Y’s mother says she feel that her son is more social, smiling more, and sleeping and eating better.

Several months after Y’s school performance, mood, and behaviors improve, his physicians give him permission to play non-contact sports. He is excited to play baseball. Because of his symptoms, we recommend continuing treating his ADHD and depressive symptoms and monitoring the need for medication. We discussed with Y nonpharmacotherapeutic options, including access to an individualized education plan at school, individual therapy, and formalized cognitive training.

Bottom Line

Traumatic brain injury (TBI) affects children and adults with long-term sequelae, which affects outcomes. Outcome is dependent on several risk factors. Many patients with TBI also suffer from neuropsychiatric symptoms that affect their functioning at home and in social and occupational settings. Those with premorbid psychiatric conditions need to be closely monitored because they may be at greater risk for problems with mood and executive function. Treatment should be targeted to individual complaints.

Related Resources

  • Giza CC, Kutcher JS, Ashwal S, et al. Summary of evidence-based guideline update: evaluation and management of concussion in sports: report of the Guideline Development Subcommittee of the American Academy of Neurology. Neurology. 2013;80(24): 2250-2257.
  • Reardon CL, Factor RM. Sport psychiatry: a systematic review of diagnosis and medical treatment of mental illness in athletes. Sports Med. 2010;40(11):961-980.
 

 

Drug Brand Names

Citalopram • Celexa            Dextroamphetamine • Adderall

Fluoxetine • Prozac             Lisdexamfetamine dimesylate • Vyvanse

Disclosure

The authors report no financial relationships with any company whose products are mentioned in this article or with manufacturers of competing products.

CASE Angry and depressed

Y is a 16-year-old male who presents with his mother to our clinic for medication evaluation because of anger issues and problems learning in school. He says he has been feeling depressed for several months and noticed significant irritability. Y sleeps excessively, sometimes for more than 12 hours a day, and eats more than he usually does. He reports feeling hopeless, helpless, and guilty for letting his family down. Y, who is in the 10th grade, acknowledges trouble focusing and concentrating but attributed this to a previous diagnosis of attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD). He stopped taking his stimulant medication several months ago because he did not like taking it. He denies thoughts of self-harm or thinking about death.

Y’s mother reports that her son had been athletic but had to stop playing football because he has had 5 concussions. Y’s inability to play sports appears to be a precipitating factor in his decline in mood (Box). He had his first concussion at age 13; the last one was several months before his presenting to the clinic. Y experienced loss of consciousness and unsteady gait after his concussions and was hospitalized for some of them. Y says his life goals are “playing sports and being a marine,” which may be compromised because of his head injuries.

His mother reports Y is having more anger outbursts and says his personality is changing. Y viewed this change as just being more assertive and fails to see that others may be scared by his behavior. He is getting into more fights at school and is more impulsive and unpredictable, according to his mother. Y is struggling in school with cognitive deficits and memory problems; his grade point average (GPA) drops from 3.5 to 0.3 over several months. He had been homeschooled initially because of uncontrolled impulsivity and aggression, but was reintegrated to public school. Y has a history of a mathematics disorder but had done well without school accommodations before the head injuries. Lack of access to his peers and poor self-esteem because of his declining grades are making his mood worse. He denies a history of substance use and his urine drug screen is negative.

Recently, Y’s grandfather, with whom he had been close, died and 2 friends were killed in car accidents in the last few years. Y has no history of psychiatric hospitalization. He had seen a psychotherapist for depression. He had been on lisdexamfetamine, 30 mg/d, citalopram, 10 mg/d, and an unknown dose of dextroamphetamine. He had no major medical comorbidities. He lives with his mother. His parents are separated but he has frequent contact with his father. His developmental history is unremarkable. There was a questionable family history of schizophrenia, “nervous breakdowns,” depression, and bipolar disorder. There was no family history of suicide.

On his initial mental status examination, Y appears to be his stated age and is dressed appropriately. He is well dressed, suggesting that he puts a lot of care into his personal appearance. He is alert and oriented. He is cooperative and has fair eye contact. His gait is normal and no motor abnormalities are evident. His speech is normal in rate, rhythm, and volume. He can remember events with great accuracy. He reports that his mood is depressed and “down.” His affect appears irritable and he has low frustration tolerance, especially towards his mother. He is easy to anger but is re-directable. He does not endorse thoughts of suicidality or harm to others. He denies auditory or visual hallucinations, and paranoia. He does not appear to be responding to internal stimuli. His judgment and insight are fair.

What would be your diagnosis at this point?

a) major depressive disorder

b) oppositional defiant disorder

c) bipolar disorder, most recent episode depressed

d) ADHD, untreated

e) post-concussion syndrome

The authors' observations

Traumatic brain injury (TBI) affects 1.7 to 3.8 million people in the United States. More than 473,000 children present to the emergency room annually with TBI, approximately 75% of whom are given a label of mild TBI in the United States.1-3 TBI patients present with varying degrees of problems ranging from headaches to cognitive deficits and death. Symptoms may be transient or permanent.4 Prepubescent children are at higher risk and are more likely to sustain permanent damage post-TBI, with problems in attention, executive functioning, memory, and cognition.5-7

Prognosis depends on severity of injury and environmental factors, including socioeconomic status, family dysfunction, and access to resources.8 Patients may present during the acute concussion phase with physical symptoms, such as headaches, nausea, vomiting, sensitivity to light and sounds, and memory deficits, and psychiatric complaints such as anger, irritability, and mood swings. Symptoms may persist post-concussion, leading to problems in personal relationships and social and occupational functioning, and neuropsychiatric manifestations, including changes in personality, depression, suicidal thoughts, and substance dependence. As seen in this case, Y had neuropsychiatric manifestations after his TBI but other factors, such as his ADHD diagnosis and the death of his grandfather and friends, may have contributed to his presentation.

 

 

Up to one-half of children with brain injuries may be at increased risk for unfavorable behavioral outcomes, which include internalizing and externalizing presentations.9 These behavioral problems may emerge several years after the injury and often persist or get worse with time. Behavioral functioning before injury usually dictates long-term outcomes post injury. The American Academy of Neurology recently released guidelines for the assessment and treatment of athletes with concussions (see Related Resources).

TREATMENT Restart medication

We restart Y on citalopram, 10 mg/d, which he tolerated in the past, and increase it to 20 mg/d after 4 days to address his depression and irritability. He also is restarted on lisdexamfetamine, 30 mg/d, for his ADHD. We give his mother the Child Behavior Checklist and Teacher’s Report Forms to gather additional collateral information. We ask Y to follow up in 1 month and we encourage him to continue seeing his psychotherapist.

Which test(s) would you order?

a) neuropsychological testing

b) neurology referral

c) imaging studies

d) no testing

EVALUATION Testing

Although Y denies feeling depressed to the neuropsychologist, the examiner notes her concerns about his depression based on his mental status examination during testing.

Neuropsychological testing reveals a discrepancy noted between normal verbal skills and perceptual intellectual skills that were in the borderline range (Table). Testing revealed results supporting executive dysfunction and distractibility, which are consistent with his history of ADHD. Y’s broad reading scores are in the 20th percentile and math scores in the 30th percentile. Although he has a history of a mathematics disorder, his reading deficits are considered a decline compared with his previous performance.

The authors' observations

Y is a 16-year-old male who presented with anger, depression, and academic problems. He had genetic loading with a questionable family history of schizophrenia, “nervous breakdowns,” depression, and bipolar disorder. Other than his concussions, Y was healthy, however, he had pre-morbid, untreated ADHD. He was doing well academically until his concussions, after which he started to see a steep decline in his grades. He was struggling with low self-esteem, which affected his mood. Multiple contributors perpetuated his difficulties, including, his inability to play sports; being home-schooled; removal from his friends; deaths of close friends and family; and a concern that his medical limitation to refrain from physical activities was affecting his career ambitions, contributing to his sense of hopelessness.

Y responded well to the stimulant and antidepressant, but it is important to note the increased risk of non-compliance in teenagers, even when they report seemingly minor side effects, despite doing well clinically. Y required frequent psychiatric follow up and repeat neuropsychological evaluation to monitor his progress.

OUTCOME Back on the playing field

At Y’s 1 month follow up, he reports feeling less depressed but citalopram, 20 mg/d, makes him feel “plain.” His GPA increases to 2.5 and he completes 10th grade. Lisdexamfetamine is titrated to 60 mg/d, he is focusing at school, and his anger is better controlled. Y’s mother is hesitant to change any medications because of her son’s overall improvement.

A few weeks before his next follow up appointment, Y’s mother calls stating that his depression is worse as he has not been taking citalopram because he doesn’t like how it makes him feel. He is started on fluoxetine, 10 mg/d. At his next appointment, Y says that he tolerates fluoxetine. His mood improves substantially and he is doing much better. Y’s mother says she feel that her son is more social, smiling more, and sleeping and eating better.

Several months after Y’s school performance, mood, and behaviors improve, his physicians give him permission to play non-contact sports. He is excited to play baseball. Because of his symptoms, we recommend continuing treating his ADHD and depressive symptoms and monitoring the need for medication. We discussed with Y nonpharmacotherapeutic options, including access to an individualized education plan at school, individual therapy, and formalized cognitive training.

Bottom Line

Traumatic brain injury (TBI) affects children and adults with long-term sequelae, which affects outcomes. Outcome is dependent on several risk factors. Many patients with TBI also suffer from neuropsychiatric symptoms that affect their functioning at home and in social and occupational settings. Those with premorbid psychiatric conditions need to be closely monitored because they may be at greater risk for problems with mood and executive function. Treatment should be targeted to individual complaints.

Related Resources

  • Giza CC, Kutcher JS, Ashwal S, et al. Summary of evidence-based guideline update: evaluation and management of concussion in sports: report of the Guideline Development Subcommittee of the American Academy of Neurology. Neurology. 2013;80(24): 2250-2257.
  • Reardon CL, Factor RM. Sport psychiatry: a systematic review of diagnosis and medical treatment of mental illness in athletes. Sports Med. 2010;40(11):961-980.
 

 

Drug Brand Names

Citalopram • Celexa            Dextroamphetamine • Adderall

Fluoxetine • Prozac             Lisdexamfetamine dimesylate • Vyvanse

Disclosure

The authors report no financial relationships with any company whose products are mentioned in this article or with manufacturers of competing products.

References



1. Jager TE, Weiss HB, Coben JH, et al. Traumatic brain injuries evaluated in US emergency departments, 1992-1994. Acad Emerg Med. 2000;7(2):134-140.
2. Committee on Quality Improvement American Academy of Pediatrics; Commission on Clinical Policies and Research American Academy of Family Physicians. The management of minor closed head injury in children. Pediatrics. 1999;104(6):1407-1415.
3. Koepsell TD, Rivara FP, Vavilala MS, et al. Incidence and descriptive epidemiologic features of traumatic brain injury in King County, Washington. Pediatrics. 2011;128(5):946-954.
4. Sahler CS, Greenwald BD. Traumatic brain injury in sports: a review [published online July 9, 2012]. Rehabil Res Pract. 2012;2012:659652. doi: 10.1155/2012/659652.
5. Crowe L, Babl F, Anderson V, et al. The epidemiology of paediatric head injuries: data from a referral centre in Victoria, Australia. J Paediatr Child Health. 2009;45(6):346-350.
6. Anderson V, Catroppa C, Morse S, et al. Intellectual outcome from preschool traumatic brain injury: a 5-year prospective, longitudinal study. Pediatrics. 2009;124(6):e1064-1071.
7. Jaffe KM, Fay GC, Polissar NL, et al. Severity of pediatric traumatic brain injury and neurobehavioral recovery at one year—a cohort study. Arch Phys Med Rehabil. 1993; 74(6):587-595.
8. Anderson VA, Catroppa C, Dudgeon P, et al. Understanding predictors of functional recovery and outcome 30 months following early childhood head injury. Neuropsychology. 2006;20(1):42-57.
9. Li L, Liu J. The effect of pediatric traumatic brain injury on behavioral outcomes: a systematic review. Dev Med Child Neurol. 2013;55(1):37-45.

References



1. Jager TE, Weiss HB, Coben JH, et al. Traumatic brain injuries evaluated in US emergency departments, 1992-1994. Acad Emerg Med. 2000;7(2):134-140.
2. Committee on Quality Improvement American Academy of Pediatrics; Commission on Clinical Policies and Research American Academy of Family Physicians. The management of minor closed head injury in children. Pediatrics. 1999;104(6):1407-1415.
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Current Psychiatry - 12(11)
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Current Psychiatry - 12(11)
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49-52, 54
Page Number
49-52, 54
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Angry, inattentive, and sidelined
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Angry, inattentive, and sidelined
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depression, attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder, ADHD, cognitive, anxiety, major depressive disorder, MDD, oppositional defiant disorder, bipolar disorder, post-concussion syndrome, concussion
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depression, attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder, ADHD, cognitive, anxiety, major depressive disorder, MDD, oppositional defiant disorder, bipolar disorder, post-concussion syndrome, concussion
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