Organ Transplantation Psychiatry

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Organ Transplantation Psychiatry - Green Light Check

  • Goal: Assess psychosocial suitability for transplant.
  • Core Assessment Areas (📌 LAST: Lifestyle, Adherence, Support, Temperament):
    • Mental status, cognitive function (consent capacity).
    • Psychiatric history (mood, psychosis, anxiety).
    • Substance use (>6 months abstinence vital, esp. alcohol/drugs).
    • Social support, coping skills.
    • Transplant understanding, adherence potential.
  • Key Contraindications (Red Flags 🚩):
    • Active psychosis, severe unstable mood disorder.
    • Active substance abuse (failing >6 months abstinence).
    • Severe cognitive impairment precluding consent/adherence.
    • Persistent, documented non-adherence.
    • Critically inadequate social support.

⭐ Active substance dependence (especially ongoing alcohol or illicit drug use within the last 6 months) is a strong relative or absolute psychiatric contraindication to organ transplantation.

Organ Transplantation Psychiatry - Post-Op Mind Benders

  • Common Acute Issues:
    • Delirium: Most frequent; fluctuating consciousness.
    • Anxiety/Agitation.
    • Psychosis: Can be drug-induced.
  • Key Triggers:
    • Medications: Corticosteroids, Immunosuppressants (CNIs: Tacrolimus, Cyclosporine), Anesthesia.
    • Systemic: Infection, metabolic issues, pain, hypoxia.
    • ICU Environment.
  • Drug Neurotoxicity Highlights:
    • Corticosteroids: Psychosis, mania, depression.
    • CNIs (Tacrolimus, Cyclosporine): Tremor, headache, seizures, PRES, delirium.
  • Management Basics:
    • Identify & treat underlying medical cause (infection, metabolic).
    • Supportive care: Reorientation, sleep hygiene.
    • Pharmacological: Antipsychotics (Haloperidol); Benzodiazepines (cautious use).

⭐ Delirium is the most common psychiatric complication in the immediate peri-operative period, affecting up to 50% of some transplant populations (e.g., liver, lung).

Organ Transplantation Psychiatry - Meds & Mood Maze

  • Immunosuppressant Neuropsychiatric Effects:
    • Corticosteroids: Mood (mania/depression), psychosis, anxiety, insomnia; dose-dependent.
    • CNIs (Tacrolimus, Cyclosporine): Anxiety, delirium, tremor, PRES.
    • mTOR Inhibitors (Sirolimus): Anxiety, depression.
  • DDIs: CYP450 (esp. CYP3A4) crucial.
    • Inducers (Carbamazepine, St. John's Wort): ↓ levels → rejection.
    • Inhibitors (Fluoxetine, Valproate, Azoles, grapefruit): ↑ levels → toxicity.
    • 📌 St. John's Wort: AVOID (potent inducer).
  • Psychotropic Management:
    • Monitor levels (immunosuppressants, Lithium).
    • SSRIs (e.g., Sertraline) preferred (fewer DDIs).
    • Caution: QTc prolonging drugs.

⭐ Corticosteroids (e.g., prednisolone) are well-known to cause a wide range of neuropsychiatric side effects, including mood changes (mania, depression), psychosis, anxiety, and insomnia, often dose-dependent.

Drug interactions: Immunosuppressants & psychotropicsoka

Organ Transplantation Psychiatry - Long Haul Psyche Care

  • Key Focus Areas: Sustained mental well-being, medication adherence, Quality of Life (QoL).
  • Common Long-Term Issues:
    • Depression & Anxiety: Persistent or recurrent; screen regularly.
    • PTSD: Related to transplant experience, ICU stay.
    • Body Image Concerns: Scars, weight changes (e.g., corticosteroids).
    • Neurocognitive Effects: Immunosuppressants (e.g., tacrolimus, cyclosporine) can impact memory/concentration.
    • Substance Use Relapse: Ongoing monitoring crucial.
    • Caregiver Burden: Significant stress on family; requires support.
  • Medication Adherence: Paramount for graft survival.

    ⭐ Non-adherence to immunosuppressive medication regimens is a significant cause of late graft dysfunction and failure, with rates estimated between 20-50% at various times post-transplant.

  • Interventions: Psychotherapy (CBT, supportive), psychopharmacology, peer support groups, psychoeducation for patient and family.

High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways

  • Pre-transplant psychiatric evaluation is crucial for suitability, adherence potential, and psychosocial support.
  • Common post-transplant: delirium, anxiety, depression, PTSD.
  • Immunosuppressants (e.g., corticosteroids) can cause neuropsychiatric side effects (mood changes, psychosis).
  • Substance use (especially alcohol) is a major contraindication and relapse risk.
  • Adherence to medical regimen is paramount; psychiatric stability significantly impacts this.
  • Capacity assessment is vital if psychiatric illness impacts transplant decision-making.

Practice Questions: Organ Transplantation Psychiatry

Test your understanding with these related questions

An SSRI antidepressant, such as fluoxetine, will be prescribed for an adult patient. You should advise him or her that two of the most likely side effects or adverse responses that may eventually occur at therapeutic blood levels are which of the following?

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Flashcards: Organ Transplantation Psychiatry

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Delirium is more commonly associated with _____ hallucinations.

TAP TO REVEAL ANSWER

Delirium is more commonly associated with _____ hallucinations.

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