Fluoxetine for OCD After Brain Injury
Mr. A, an 18-year-old man, suffered severe head trauma in a car accident. Ten months after the head trauma, he had normal results on a neurologic examination and seemed to be in a good general state of health, but he reported severe checking compulsions and obsessions and greater impulsivity. Two years after the accident, he was referred to our psychiatric hospital and scored a total of 30 on the Yale-Brown Obsessive Compulsive Scale (3). He had no other psychiatric disorders.Magnetic resonance imaging showed multiple lesions affecting the right ventral-lateral prefrontal cortex, the orbital-frontal cortex bilaterally, the right anterior temporal lobe, the corpus callosum, and adjacent white matter regions. [123I]β-Carbomethoxy-3-(4-idiophenyl)-tropane ([123I]β-CIT) single photon emission computed tomography (SPECT), which was performed as part of an ongoing study (4), showed lower serotonin transporter density (two standard deviations below that of age-matched comparison subjects) in the midbrain and hypothalamus.Mr. A was treated with up to 60 mg/day of fluoxetine for 90 days and showed a good clinical response. His compulsions were more dramatically reduced than his obsessions. His score on the Yale-Brown Obsessive Compulsive Scale decreased from 30 to 10, which was associated with great improvement in his quality of life.
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