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You are here: Home > Health A to Z > Organic brain syndrome



Organic brain syndrome

Definition
Treatment
Alternative Names
Expectations (prognosis)
Causes, incidence, and risk factors
Complications
Symptoms
Calling your health care provider
Signs and tests


Brain
Brain

 Definition  

Organic brain syndrome (OBS) is a general term, referring to physical disorders (usually not psychiatric disorders) that cause decreased mental function.

 Alternative Names  

OBS; Organic mental disorder (OMS); Chronic organic brain syndrome

 Causes, incidence, and risk factors  

OBS is a common diagnosis in the elderly. It is not an inevitable part of aging, however. OBS is not a separate disease, but is a general term used to categorize physical conditions that can cause mental changes.

Disorders associated with OBS include, but are not limited to:

  • Degenerative disorders:
    • Creutzfeldt-Jacob disease
    • Huntington disease
    • Multiple sclerosis
    • Normal pressure hydrocephalus
    • Pick disease
    • Senile dementia, Alzheimer type
    • Parkinson's disease
    • Diffuse Lewy Body disease
  • Cardiovascular disorders:
    • Arrhythmias -- may cause some types of OBS
    • Cardiac infections (endocarditis, myocarditis, etc.) -- may sometimes cause OBS
    • Hypertensive (related to high blood pressure) brain injury
    • Multi-infarct dementia (multiple strokes)
    • Stroke
    • TIA
  • Trauma-induced brain injury:
    • Chronic subdural hematoma (blood clot causing pressure on brain)
    • Concussion
    • Intracerebral hemorrhage
    • Subarachnoid hemorrhage
  • Dementia due to metabolic causes
  • Respiratory conditions -- may cause or aggravate OBS
    • Hypoxia (decreased oxygen in the body)
    • Hypercapnia (increased carbon dioxide levels in the body)
  • Infections
    • Any acute or chronic infection
    • Septicemia (presence in the bloodstream of toxic by-products caused by infection)
    • Meningitis
    • Encephalitis
  • Drug and alcohol related conditions
    • Intoxication, drug abuse, or alcohol use
    • Long-term effects of alcohol, Wernicke-Korsakoff syndrome
    • Alcohol withdrawal state
    • Withdrawal from drugs (especially sedative-hypnotics and corticosteroids)
  • Other medical disorders
    • Thyroid disease (high or low)
    • Vitamin deficiency (B12 and others)
    • Liver disease
    • Kidney disease
    • Cancer
Other conditions that may be related to organic brain syndrome include: depression, neuroses, and psychoses of various types, which may occur at the same time as the OBS.

 Symptoms  

Symptoms vary with the specific disease. In general, organic brain syndromes cause varying degrees of confusion, delirium (severe, short-term loss of brain function), agitation, and dementia (long-term, often progressive, loss of brain function).

 Signs and tests  

Testing and physical examination vary, depending on the specific disorder. Head CT scan, head MRI, EEG, and blood tests, to evaluate for medical conditions, are done frequently.

 Treatment  

Treatment varies with the specific disorder. Many of the disorders have nonspecific treatments -- primarily supportive care to assist the person in areas where brain function is lost.

Medications may be needed to reduce aggressive behaviors typical of some of the conditions in this category.

 Expectations (prognosis)  

See the specific disorder. Some disorders are acute and treatable, but many are chronic or progressive.

 Complications  

Loss of ability to interact with others or function independently is common.

 Calling your health care provider  

Call your health care provider if:

  • Organic brain syndrome has been diagnosed and you are uncertain of the actual, specific diagnosis
  • You have symptoms which suggest this problem
  • You have been diagnosed with OBS and symptoms become worse

Review date: 9/7/2006

Reviewed By: Kenneth Gross, M.D., Neurology, North Miami, FL. Review provided by VeriMed Healthcare Network.

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