Computed tomography in psychiatric patients

Date
1986
Authors
Emsley, R. A.
Stander, D.
Bell, P. S. H.
Gledhill, R. F.
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
HMPG
Abstract
In a retrospective study of 100 consecutive adult psychiatric patients referred for computed tomography (CT) for suspected intracranial lesions, abnormalities were found in 61%. Of these, 23% had focal lesions significantly associated with alcohol abuse, previous craniocerebral trauma and focal neurological signs. Detection of focal lesions influenced patient management in over half the cases. No single factor was able to predict all patients with focal lesions and the correlation between electroencephalogram and CT results was weak. If criteria for CT in psychiatric patients are too restrictive, some cases of occult brain disease may escape detection.
Description
Article
The original publication is availble at Emsley, R.A., Stander, D. , Bell, P.S.H. & Gledhill, R.F.1986. Computed tomography in psychiatric patients. SAMJ, 70:212-214, http://www.samj.org.za
Keywords
Brain -- Diseases -- Diagnosis, Mental disorders, Brain -- Imaging, Brain -- Tomography
Citation
Emsley, R.A., Stander, D., Bell, P.S.H. & Gledhill, R.F. 1986. Computed tomography in psychiatric patients. SAMJ, 70:212-214