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Παρασκευή 16 Ιουνίου 2017

Pseudobulbar affective disorder, emotion and the brain

Emotional expression and cognition are unlinked in pseudobulbar affective disorder

In the past half-century, the neuroanatomical regulators of emotion have become better understood. The rediscovery of the limbic areas and their intimate links with the basal ganglia, especially the ventral striatum and associated orbitofrontal cortex, and the special role of the right hemisphere in emotional experience has been central to this understanding.1 However, the complexity of the relationship between these circuits and areas of isocortex and the descending pathways to midbrain and brainstem nuclei in volitional and emotional faciobulbar expression remain less well understood. Emotional disorder is a major feature of frontal brain disease, and complex emotional states and gelastic seizures are well-recognised features of some forms of epilepsy. Uncontrolled, disabling and unstable mood change characteristics of pseudobulbar affective disorder may develop after diffuse traumatic brain injury, in frontal or multi-infarct cerebrovascular disease, multiple sclerosis and degenerative brain...



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