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Psychiatric Issues in Rheumatology
November 6, 2006 |
James L. Levenson, MD |
Vice-Chairman, Department of Psychiatry Professor of Psychiatry, Medicine, and Surgery, Chairman, Consultation/Liaison
Psychiatry, Virginia Commonwealth University Medical Center
This column reviews psychiatric issues in rheumatologic
disorders, including general principles of diagnosis, management, and
treatment, followed by particular focus on systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE)
and rheumatoid arthritis. Osteoarthritis, Sjögren’s syndrome, systemic
sclerosis, temporal arteritis, polymyositis, and Behçet’s disease are also
discussed, followed by secondary psychiatric syndromes caused by
nonrheumatologic disorders and medications encountered in rheumatology
patients. A more comprehensive review of these issues is available elsewhere,1 as is a
review of fibromyalgia,2 which is beyond the scope of this column.
General Principles of Diagnosis and Assessment
The mental status examination is the most sensitive,
available, and least expensive tool for assessing neuropsychiatric status in
rheumatologic disorders. Neuropsychologic testing provides a more detailed,
sensitive assessment of cognitive function but it is not specific to particular
rheumatologic disorders. Laboratory studies help rule out infection and confirm
the presence of active rheumatologic disease. High disease activity increases
the likelihood of central nervous system (CNS) involvement; however, the
absence of systemic disease activity does not rule out CNS involvement.
When rheumatology patients
have neuropsychiatric symptoms, lumbar puncture is indicated to rule out CNS
infection and assess the degree of disease activity in the CNS. In patients
without CNS infection, cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) pleocytosis and increased CSF
protein are suggestive of CNS involvement by SLE or other rheumatologic
disease.3 CSF studies should include oligoclonal bands, which are
present in only a small number of disorders, including neurosyphilis, Lyme
disease, multiple sclerosis, Sjögren’s syndrome, and CNS SLE. While magnetic
resonance imaging (MRI) is the best available imaging technique for identifying
focal CNS lesions in patients with rheumatologic disorders and neuropsychiatric
symptoms, it cannot reliably differentiate acute from old lesions.3
Psychiatric disorders, especially depression, often remain
unrecognized and undertreated in patients with rheumatologic disorders due
partly to a tendency to focus on the physical aspects of disease and to
misperceive depression and anxiety disorders as normal reactions to chronic
illness. Diagnosing depression is also complicated because there is an overlap
in symptoms of depression and rheumatologic disorders (eg, fatigue, weight
loss, insomnia, and lack of appetite).
General Principles of Treatment
When rheumatologic diseases affect the CNS, the primary
treatment is corticosteroids when the pathophysiology is thought to be neuronal
injury or inflammation resulting from autoantibodies, and anticoagulants when
hypercoagulability is involved (eg, the anticardiolipin antibody syndrome).
When corticosteroids are ineffective, other immunosuppressive agents may be
helpful.
For primary psychiatric
disorders, cognitive and behavioral psychotherapies have been effective in
reducing psychologic distress and pain and improving coping and functioning in
rheumatologic disorders.4 In choosing an antidepressant, it often
makes sense to give preference to those with greater analgesic activity, ie,
serotonin norepinephrine reuptake inhibitors and tricyclic antidepressants.
Drug interactions with psychiatric medications are generally not a problem with
current first- and second-line treatments for rheumatologic disorders.
Rheumatoid Arthritis
Rheumatoid arthritis is a chronic disorder characterized by
persistent inflammatory synovitis, typically involving peripheral small joints
in a symmetrical pattern, which can eventually result in destruction of the
joint. Approximately one-fifth of patients with rheumatoid arthritis have a
psychiatric disorder and a similar number have subsyndromal psychiatric
symptoms. Neuropsychiatric manifestations in rheumatoid arthritis can arise
through four processes, including direct CNS involvement, secondary effects of
the illness or its treatments, emotional reactions to chronic illness, and
comorbid primary psychiatric illness.
Despite the common
extra-articular manifestations associated with rheumatoid arthritis, neurologic
complications are not common. When present, the most common is peripheral
neuropathy. Direct involvement of the CNS is rare. Atlanto-axial subluxation
may occur, resulting in transverse myelitis, and is the most serious neurologic
complication of rheumatoid arthritis. Vasculitis in rheumatoid arthritis can
involve cerebral vessels, resulting in cerebral ischemia or infarction, and has
been associated with acute and chronic brain syndromes.5
Most psychiatric symptoms in patients with rheumatoid
arthritis are emotional reactions to having a painful potentially disabling and
immobilizing chronic illness adversely affecting work, family, social life, and
leisure activity. Social support that might help to offset the stress of
rheumatoid arthritis may be less available because of limited mobility. Social
support is important to patients with rheumatoid arthritis and is associated
with use of more adaptive coping strategies, greater perception of ability to
control the disease, and less psychologic distress. However, rheumatoid
arthritis disrupts social networks and social support, especially in those with
disease of greatest duration and disability.1
Cross-sectional studies in rheumatoid arthritis have shown
that the magnitude of depression is associated with the severity of pain and
the degree of functional disability, and depression may even be an independent
risk factor for mortality in rheumatoid arthritis.6 Depressed rheumatoid
arthritis patients perceive their illness as more hopeless compared with
nondepressed rheumatoid arthritis patients.7 The mechanisms by which
depression influences pain and disability in rheumatoid arthritis are poorly
understood. Although depression and psychologic stress have been shown to
result in immune dysfunction, there is no evidence to suggest that depression
increases the pain and disability of rheumatoid arthritis by changing the
underlying inflammation. A more likely explanation lies in adverse effects of
depression and anxiety on pain perception, catastrophizing and other negative
illness cognitions, adherence, health-seeking behaviors, and healthcare
utilization as in other chronic illnesses.1
Systemic Lupus Erythematosus
SLE is an autoimmune
disorder of unknown cause characterized by immune dysregulation with tissue
damage caused by pathogenic autoantibodies, immune complexes, and T lymphocytes,
with 90% of cases in women of childbearing age. SLE may involve one or multiple
organ systems. Common clinical manifestations include cutaneous lesions,
constitutional symptoms, arthritis, pericarditis/pleuritis, renal disease,
neuropsychiatric disorders, and hematologic disorders.
CNS involvement is a major cause of morbidity and mortality
in SLE. Neuropsychiatric manifestations range from stroke, seizures, headaches,
neuropathy, transverse myelitis, and movement disorders to cognitive deficits,
depression, mania, anxiety, psychosis, and delirium. Psychiatric syndromes in
SLE can be caused by direct CNS involvement; infection, other systemic illness,
or drug side effects; reaction to chronic illness; or comorbid primary
psychiatric illness.3,8
The two mechanisms of CNS injury in SLE are both mediated by
antibodies; they are neuronal injury and microvasculopathy.3,8
Antineuronal antibodies have been associated with psychosis, depression,
delirium, coma, and cognitive dysfunction. In contrast, antiphospholipid
antibodies cause focal deficits (strokes) and cognitive dysfunction. These two
pathogenic mechanisms may be mutually reinforcing. Microvascular endothelial
injury in the CNS may increase the permeability of the blood-brain barrier,
leading to influx of autoantibodies and further CNS damage.
With the possible exception of cognitive dysfunction,
psychiatric manifestations of SLE are mostly reversible with corticosteroid
treatment. Even cognitive deficits sometimes respond to corticosteroids.9
However, most focal neurologic events are irreversible and some patients experience
progressive cognitive impairment, often with cerebral atrophy.3
Common psychologic reactions to having SLE include grief,
depression, anxiety, regression, denial, and invalidism. Social isolation is
reinforced by self-consciousness about appearance and by public ignorance about
SLE. Patients fear worsening disease, cognitive impairment, stroke, renal
failure, becoming disabled and a burden on their families, and death.
Although stress may cause an SLE flare, it is also likely, if
not inevitable, that SLE flares cause stress. It is often perceived that stress
precipitates onset or exacerbation of SLE symptoms, but this has received
little study. There is some evidence of stress-induced immune dysregulation in
SLE.3
Psychiatric Disorders in
Systemic Lupus Erythematosus
The American College of Rheumatology (ACR) developed
standardized nomenclature for neuropsychiatric SLE,10 including
psychiatric disorders psychosis, acute confusional state, cognitive
dysfunction, anxiety disorder, and mood disorders. However, these categories do
not match those in the Diagnostic
and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, Fourth Edition-Text
Revision.11
Cognitive dysfunction is
the most common neuropsychiatric disorder in patients with SLE, occurring in up
to 80%.9,12 On neuropsychologic testing, even patients who have never
had overt neuropsychiatric symptoms are often found to have cognitive
impairment. Depression is the second most common neuropsychiatric disorder in
SLE, with a prevalence of almost 50%.3,12 Diagnosing depression in
SLE is confounded by the overlap between depressive symptoms and those associated
with SLE or its treatment. Anxiety is quite common in SLE patients, often as a
reaction to the illness. In patients with SLE, the most common cause of mania
is corticosteroid therapy. Psychosis in SLE patients can be a manifestation of
direct CNS involvement, and in some but not all studies, it has been linked to
antiribosomal-P antibodies. Delirium (“acute confusional state” in the ACR criteria)
is common in severe SLE and is a result of CNS lupus, medications, infection,
or other comorbid medical disorders. Personality changes have been reported in
SLE patients whose disease has damaged the frontal or temporal lobes.
Most laboratory tests relevant to SLE (eg, serum antinuclear
antibody [ANA], anti-deoxyribonucleic acid antibodies, complement levels) do
not seem to correlate with CNS SLE activity. Testing for antiphospholipid
antibodies (including lupus anticoagulant and anticardiolipin) is important,
particularly in patients with focal symptoms, because the results may influence
treatment and prognosis.13 Patients with antiphospholipid syndrome
are treated primarily with anticoagulation rather than corticosteroid or
cytotoxic therapy. Antiribosomal-P antibodies have been linked to psychosis,
but have a low positive predictive value.3
Distinguishing corticosteroid-induced psychiatric reactions
from a flare of CNS SLE is a well-recognized but still difficult challenge.
Given the risk of untreated CNS SLE, and the likelihood that corticosteroids
will alleviate such flares and only temporarily exacerbate
corticosteroid-induced psychiatric reactions, an empirical initiation or
increase of corticosteroids is often the most prudent intervention.3
(Corticosteroid-induced psychiatric reactions are discussed below.)
Differential Diagnosis of
Neuropsychiatric Disorders in Systemic Lupus Erythematosus
The differential diagnosis
of neuropsychiatric SLE includes Sjögren’s syndrome, mixed connective tissue
disease, multiple sclerosis, rheumatoid arthritis, sarcoidosis, hepatitis C,
polyarteritis nodosa, microscopic angiitis, temporal arteritis, Wegener’s
granulomatosis, Behçet’s disease, chronic fatigue syndrome, fibromyalgia, and
somatization disorder. Several cases of factitious SLE have been reported but
none had serologic evidence of an autoimmune disorder.14
Drug-induced SLE has been reported with phenothiazines (particularly
chlorpromazine), carbamazepine, divalproex, other anticonvulsants, and lithium,
and may include positive ANAs and antiphospholipid antibodies; however, CNS
manifestations are rare.3 If the offending drug is discontinued,
lupus symptoms typically resolve within weeks, although the ANA may remain
positive for over a year.
Osteoarthritis
Osteoarthritis is the most common joint disease, most often
idiopathic and/or the result of trauma (acute or chronic), although it also may
occur in a variety of metabolic and endocrine disorders. Psychologic disorders
in patients with osteoarthritis arise either as a reaction to the pain,
disability, and resulting life difficulties related to the osteoarthritis, or
for reasons independent of the osteoarthritis.
Osteoarthritis appears
less closely associated with depression than is rheumatoid arthritis. When
depression does occur in patients with osteoarthritis, it has been associated
with younger age, less education, higher pain, and greater self-reported impact
of the osteoarthritis.1,15 Anxiety and hopelessness are associated
with functional disability. Most importantly, improvement in treatment of
depression in patients with osteoarthritis results in reduced pain and
disability.16
Sjögren’s Syndrome
CNS involvement in
Sjögren’s syndrome can be focal (cerebellar ataxia, vertigo, ophthalmoplegia,
cranial nerve involvement) or diffuse (encephalopathy, aseptic
meningoencephalitis, dementia, or psychiatric manifestations).1
Focal lesions are visible on MRI and most frequently involve white matter in
the frontal and temporal lobes. Cognitive deficits are common, particularly
impairment in attention and concentration. Those with recognized
neuropsychiatric manifestations may progress to dementia. Psychiatric
manifestations usually take the form of affective disturbances (depression,
hypomania) or anxiety.17
Systemic Sclerosis
(Scleroderma)
While CNS damage is
uncommon in systemic sclerosis, psychiatric symptoms are not, with
approximately 50% of patients reporting symptoms of depression and
approximately one-fifth clinically depressed. Body image dissatisfaction is
common, contributing to psychologic distress and impairment.18
Temporal (Giant-Cell) Arteritis
Neuropsychiatric manifestations of temporal arteritis result
from either ischemic or hemorrhagic events involving arteries supplying blood
to the CNS. The clinical presentation depends on the location and extent of the
insult. Resultant dysfunction can be focal (eg, stroke leading to specific
motor or sensory deficit) or diffuse, resulting in impairment of consciousness.
Affective symptoms are frequent and visual hallucinations are particularly
common, which can progress to permanent visual loss. Treatment with high-dose
steroids is indicated as soon as the diagnosis is made on clinical grounds,
before results of arterial biopsy (which can be falsely negative) are
available, to prevent progression of the disease resulting in irreversible
blindness or other serious CNS injury.
Polymyositis
CNS vasculitis can occur
in polymyositis, resulting in neuropsychiatric manifestations. As with SLE and
temporal arteritis, the clinical features of neuropsychiatric involvement
secondary to vasculitis depend on the site and extent of the vasculitic
lesions.
Behçet’s Disease
Neuropsychiatric involvement occurs in 10% to 20% of cases of
Behçet’s disease. Aseptic meningitis or meningoencephalitis may occur acutely.
Later manifestations include personality change, chronic meningoencephalitis,
and motor signs. Depression and anxiety are common. Dementia is common in
advanced Behçet’s disease.19
Secondary Causes of Neuropsychiatric Symptoms
in Rheumatologic Disorders
Because rheumatologic disorders or their treatment may result
in immunosuppression, CNS and systemic infections are common causes of
neuropsychiatric symptoms. These include cryptococcal, tubercular,
meningococcal, and Listeria meningitis; herpes encephalitis; neurosyphilis; CNS
nocardiosis; toxoplasmosis; brain abscesses; and progressive multifocal leukoencephalopathy.
Other etiologies of neuropsychiatric manifestations in rheumatologic disorders
include uremia, hypertensive encephalopathy, cerebral lymphoma, and medication
side effects, as well as comorbid medical or psychiatric disorders and
psychologic reactions to illness.
Psychiatric side effects of selected medications used in treating
rheumatologic disorders are shown in the Table. Psychiatric side effects are
most common with corticosteroids; rare with methotrexate, cyclophosphamide
azathioprine, leflunomide, and mycophenolate mofetil; and have not been
reported with penicillamine or gold salts.
Mood disorders, including depression, mania, and mixed
dysphoric episodes, are the most common psychiatric adverse event of
corticosteroids, often accompanied by psychotic symptoms. Delirium and
psychosis (without mood symptoms) are less common. Cognitive dysfunction also
has been reported. The incidence of corticosteroid-induced psychiatric symptoms
is dose related, occurring at rates of approximately 1% in patients receiving
<40 mg/day of prednisone, 5% in those receiving 40–80 mg/day, and 20% in
those receiving >80 mg/day.20 The onset of psychiatric symptoms
is usually within the first 2 weeks (and in 90%, within the first 6 weeks) of
initiating or increasing corticosteroids.
Adjunctive treatment with
antipsychotics, antidepressants, and mood stabilizers can be helpful, depending
on the particular psychiatric symptom constellation. Tapering of
corticosteroids, which may not be possible, usually leads to remission of
psychiatric side effects, but too rapid tapering or discontinuation of corticosteroids
can also cause adverse psychiatric and systemic effects by precipitating a
flare of the rheumatologic disease, iatrogenic adrenal insufficiency, and/or
even a corticosteroid withdrawal syndrome. Corticosteroid withdrawal syndrome
is manifested by headache, fever, myalgias, arthralgias, weakness, anorexia,
nausea, weight loss, and orthostatic hypotension, and sometimes depression,
anxiety, agitation, or psychosis.21 Symptoms respond to an increase
or resumption of corticosteroid dosage.
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