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The Primary Care Companion To The Journal of Clinical Psychiatry | 2013

Diagnosis and Treatment of Depression in Patients With Congestive Heart Failure: A Review of the Literature

James K. Rustad; Theodore A. Stern; Kathy Hebert

CONTEXT Major depressive disorder (MDD) can be challenging to diagnose in patients with congestive heart failure, who often suffer from fatigue, insomnia, weight changes, and other neurovegetative symptoms that overlap with those of depression. Pathophysiologic mechanisms (eg, inflammation, autonomic nervous system dysfunction, cardiac arrhythmias, and altered platelet function) connect depression and congestive heart failure. OBJECTIVE We sought to review the prevalence, diagnosis, neurobiology, and treatment of depression associated with congestive heart failure. DATA SOURCES A search of all English-language articles between January 2003 and January 2013 was conducted using the search terms congestive heart failure and depression. STUDY SELECTION We found 1,498 article abstracts and 19 articles (meta-analyses, systematic reviews, and original research articles) that were selected for inclusion, as they contained information about our focus on diagnosis, treatment, and pathophysiology of depression associated with congestive heart failure. The search was augmented with manual review of reference lists of articles from the initial search. Articles selected for review were determined by author consensus. DATA EXTRACTION The prevalence, diagnosis, neurobiology, and treatment of depression associated with congestive heart failure were reviewed. Particular attention was paid to the safety, efficacy, and tolerability of antidepressant medications commonly used to treat depression and how their side-effect profiles impact the pathophysiology of congestive heart failure. Drug-drug interactions between antidepressant medications and medications used to treat congestive heart failure were examined. RESULTS MDD is highly prevalent in patients with congestive heart failure. Moreover, the prevalence and severity of depression correlate with the degree of cardiac dysfunction and development of congestive heart failure. Depression increases the risk of congestive heart failure, particularly in those patients with coronary artery disease , and is associated with a poorer quality of life, increased use of health care resources, more frequent adverse clinical events and hospitalizations, and twice the risk of mortality. CONCLUSIONS At present, limited empirical data exist with regard to treatment of depression in the increasingly large population of patients with congestive heart failure. Evidence reveals that both psychotherapeutic treatment (eg, cognitive-behavioral therapy) and pharmacologic treatment (eg, use of the selective serotonin reuptake inhibitor sertraline) are safe and effective in reducing depression severity in patients with cardiovascular disease. Collaborative care programs featuring interventions that work to improve adherence to medical and psychiatric treatments improve both cardiovascular disease and depression outcomes. Depression rating scales such as the 9-item Patient Health Questionnaire should be used to monitor therapeutic efficacy.


Psychosomatics | 2015

Risk Factors for Alcohol Relapse Following Orthotopic Liver Transplantation: A Systematic Review

James K. Rustad; Theodore A. Stern; Maithri Prabhakar

BACKGROUND Each year, 5000-6000 individuals undergo orthotopic liver transplantation (OLT) in the United States, and of these, nearly 18% have alcoholic liver disease. Relapse to alcohol occurs in more than 40% of patients with OLT for alcoholic liver disease. OBJECTIVES We sought to identify factors that predict relapse to alcohol or medication nonadherence following OLT in patients with alcoholic liver disease and to review what randomized clinical interventions have addressed these factors following OLT. Our hypothesis was that there would be factors before and after OLT that predict relapse to alcohol following OLT, and that these, if targeted, might improve sobriety and associated outcomes of adherence with medications and appointments. METHODS We performed a review (focusing on articles published since 2004) with PubMed and MEDLINE searches using the following search terms: liver transplantation, recidivism, alcohol relapse, and predictors of alcohol relapse. We supplemented the online searches with manual reviews of article reference lists and selected relevant articles for further review by author consensus. RESULTS In largely white populations, prospective studies document that shorter length of pretransplantation sobriety is a significant predictor of time to first drink and time to binge use. Presence of psychiatric comorbidity, high score on standardized High-risk Alcoholism Relapse Scale, and diagnosis of Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (Fourth Edition) alcohol dependence are predictive of posttransplantation alcohol relapse. Pretransplantation alcohol use history variables (e.g., family history of alcoholism) reliably discriminate between complete abstainers and those who drink, while medical and psychosocial characteristics at early post-liver transplantation period (e.g., more bodily pain) maximally discriminate patterns of alcohol use. Alcoholic individuals with early-onset, rapidly accelerating moderate use and early-onset, continuously increasing heavy use have more than double the prevalence of steatohepatitis or rejection on biopsy and graft failure and more frequent mortality resulting from recurrent alcoholic liver disease than late-onset (i.e., peak of heaviest drinking at 6y posttransplantation) alcohol users do. Fortunately, pretransplantation screening combined with a structured pretransplantation management program and a 12-step program attendance reduced recidivism. No randomized clinical trials have been performed that target pretransplantation risk factors in individuals with alcoholic liver disease before or after OLT to improve post-OLT outcomes. CONCLUSIONS Recent research findings suggest that screening can reveal individuals who are vulnerable to alcohol relapse and targeted intervention can prevent their relapse to alcohol. Based on existing addiction treatments (e.g., relapse prevention plan construction), randomized clinical trials tailored to post-OLT patients should be conducted to improve their survival and quality of life.


Psychosomatics | 2015

The Recognition and Treatment of Rabies: A Case Report and Discussion

James K. Rustad; Tracey A. Cho; Zeina Chemali; Natalia S. Rost; Theodore A. Stern

Although rabies is rare in the United States, infection with the virus must be considered and treated soon after viral transmission; failure to diagnose and to intervene will usually result in disease progression and death. Typically transmitted often through an unrecognized bite of an infected animal (e.g., dog or bat), the clinical course is characterized by 5 phases (the incubation period, the prodrome, an acute neurologic phase, coma, and death). We present the case of a man with rapidly progressive and seemingly disparate somatic symptoms (including muscles aches, difficulty swallowing, and apprehension) and discuss the differential diagnosis, the evaluation, and the treatment approaches.


Issues in Mental Health Nursing | 2017

Comprehensive Guide for the Safe Administration of rTMS While Providing for Patient Comfort

Kimberly Van Trees; James K. Rustad; Mark Weisman; Sean Phillips; Jaffrey Hashimie; F. Andrew Kozel

aJames A. Haley Veterans’ Administration Hospital and Clinics, Nursing Services, Tampa, Florida, USA; bJames A. Haley Veterans’ Administration Hospital and Clinics, Mental Health and Behavioral Sciences, Tampa, Florida, USA and University of South Florida, Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, Tampa, Florida, USA; cJames A. Haley Veterans’ Administration Hospital and Clinics, Mental Health and Behavioral Sciences, Tampa, Florida, USA; University of South Florida, Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, Tampa, Florida, USA; James A. Haley Veterans’ Administration Hospital and Clinics, HSR&D Center of Innovation on Disability and Rehabilitation Research (CINDRR), Tampa, Florida, USA


Psychoneuroendocrinology | 2011

The relationship of depression and diabetes: Pathophysiological and treatment implications

James K. Rustad; Charles B. Nemeroff


Palliative & Supportive Care | 2012

Cancer and post-traumatic stress disorder: Diagnosis, pathogenesis and treatment considerations

James K. Rustad; Daniella David; M. Beatriz Currier


Journal of Neuropsychiatry and Clinical Neurosciences | 2013

Decision-Making in Diabetes Mellitus Type 1

James K. Rustad; Jay S. Skyler; Della Matheson; Alan Delamater; Norma S. Kenyon; Ricardo Cáceda; Charles B. Nemeroff


Psychosomatics | 2016

Depressive Symptoms Before, During, and After Delirium: A Literature Review.

Scott Nelson; James K. Rustad; Glenn Catalano; Theodore A. Stern; F. Andrew Kozel


The Primary Care Companion To The Journal of Clinical Psychiatry | 2018

Catatonia: An Approach to Diagnosis and Treatment

James K. Rustad; H. Samuel Landsman; Ana Ivkovic; Christine T. Finn; Theodore A. Stern


Psychosomatics | 2018

“Moon River”: Intact Musical Appreciation and Performance in a Man with Semantic Variant Primary Progressive Aphasia

Patrick A. Ho; Theodore A. Stern; James K. Rustad

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F. Andrew Kozel

University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center

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Jaffrey Hashimie

University of South Florida

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Kimberly Van Trees

United States Department of Veterans Affairs

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Mark Weisman

University of South Florida

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