Artículos de revistas
A Psychosocial View Of Anxiety And Depression In Epilepsy.
Registro en:
Epilepsy & Behavior : E&b. v. 8, n. 1, p. 232-8, 2006-Feb.
1525-5050
10.1016/j.yebeh.2005.10.011
16356782
Autor
de Souza, Elisabete Abib Pedroso
Salgado, Priscila Camile Barioni
Institución
Resumen
The aim of this study was to study anxiety and depression in patients with epilepsy and evaluate their relationships with neuroepilepsy and psychological variables. neuroepilepsy and psychological variables. Sixty patients and 60 healthy subjects were interviewed at the outpatient clinic for epilepsy, using the Beck Depression Inventory and State-Trait-Anxiety Inventory. The objective of the semistructured interview was to identify the patients' perception of the disease, self-concept, personal strategies, and perception of seizure control. There was a significant difference in anxiety and depression between the groups, as well as a strong relationship between perception of seizure control and depression and anxiety, independently assessed. Epilepsy was associated with disease (63.4%), mental problems (11.6%), feelings of shame, fear, worry, and low self-esteem (56.6%), and perception of stigma (26.6%). The strategies were: looking for social support, seeking medical treatment, withdrawal, denial, and spiritual support. There was a significant association between psychological symptoms and perception of seizure control, which reinforces the importance of subjective aspects involved in epilepsy. 8 232-8