Abstract
Purpose. The goals of this work were to determine: (1) the nature and extent of differences in self-reported psychiatric symptoms between patients with temporal lobe epilepsy and matched healthy controls, (2) the relationship between chronicity (duration) of temporal lobe epilepsy and comorbid interictal psychiatric symptoms, and (3) the impact of comorbid psychiatric symptoms on self-reported health-related quality of life.Methods. Patients with temporal lobe epilepsy (n = 54) and healthy controls (n = 38) were administered the Symptom Checklist-90-Revised (SCL-90-R) to assess the nature and severity of psychiatric symptomatology and epilepsy patients completed the Quality of Life in Epilepsy-89 (QOLIE-89) to define health-related quality of life. Among epilepsy patients the SCL-90-R scales were examined in relation to chronicity of temporal lobe epilepsy as well as the impact of comorbid emotional-behavioral distress on health-related quality of life.Results. Compared with healthy controls, patients with epilepsy exhibited significantly higher (worse) scores across all but one of the 12 SCL-90-R scales. Among patients with epilepsy, increasing chronicity was associated with significantly higher (worse) scores across all SCL-90-R scales and increased emotional-behavioral distress was associated with lower (worse) scores across all 17 QOLIE-89 scales.Conclusion. Comorbid interictal psychiatric symptoms are elevated among patients with temporal lobe epilepsy compared with healthy controls and appear to be modestly associated with increasing chronicity (duration) of epilepsy. This comorbid emotional-behavioral distress is specifically associated with a significantly poorer health-related quality of life, and suggests that quality-of-life research should devote greater attention to the potential impact of comorbid psychiatric distress.
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