Abstract

This study examined the effects of patient expectations on short-term postoperative psychological adjustment alter surgery for epilepsy. Twenty-seven subjects (17 operative, 10 nonoperative controls) agreed to participate. A prospective longitudinal design assessed whether changes in psychosocial functioning had occurred at a mean of 7 weeks after surgery relative to the presurgical assessment. The study also examined the relation between postoperative psychosocial adjustment and preoperative patient expectations. It was found that seizure-free outcomes were associated with significant declines in depression and anxiety. Patients who exhibited preoperative optimistic expectations had lower levels of postoperative depression and anxiety, as long as they were rendered seizure-free. Conversely, those who had optimistic preoperative expectations but were not rendered seizure-free postsurgically continued to exhibit moderate to high levels of depression and anxiety. The theoretical significance of optimistic expectations and their effects on individual self-efficacy are discussed to support the notion that postsurgical adjustment is related to personal coping, even in those patients who are seizure-free after surgery.

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