Morbid hunger and hyperphagia post-traumatic brain injury in a young male: good prognosis with escitalopram and multidisciplinary rehabilitation

Objective: Morbid hunger and hyperphagia (MHH) is a rare neurological disorder that can manifest following damage to the right frontal and temporal lobes. It can lead to detrimental short and long-term complications such as electrolyte imbalances, obesity, and cardiovascular diseases. This report de...

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Published in:Brain Injury
Main Author: Zainudin M.F.; Yee C.M.; Nyein Yin K.
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Taylor and Francis Ltd. 2024
Online Access:https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85198631846&doi=10.1080%2f02699052.2024.2378838&partnerID=40&md5=e5790c5ee45b204326014d0e6ef262b3
id 2-s2.0-85198631846
spelling 2-s2.0-85198631846
Zainudin M.F.; Yee C.M.; Nyein Yin K.
Morbid hunger and hyperphagia post-traumatic brain injury in a young male: good prognosis with escitalopram and multidisciplinary rehabilitation
2024
Brain Injury
38
13
10.1080/02699052.2024.2378838
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85198631846&doi=10.1080%2f02699052.2024.2378838&partnerID=40&md5=e5790c5ee45b204326014d0e6ef262b3
Objective: Morbid hunger and hyperphagia (MHH) is a rare neurological disorder that can manifest following damage to the right frontal and temporal lobes. It can lead to detrimental short and long-term complications such as electrolyte imbalances, obesity, and cardiovascular diseases. This report details the case of a young male patient who developed MHH five months post-traumatic brain injury. Method: Single-case report. The patient exhibited colossal appetite, overeating, food-demanding behavior, and rapid weight gain. The prescription of quetiapine to manage his visual and auditory hallucinations was suspected of exacerbating the hyperphagia. A comprehensive, multidisciplinary rehabilitation approach was implemented, encompassing a meticulous dietary regime, environmental modifications, behavioral management, physical activities, therapeutic exercises, and pharmacological interventions, which included switching the anti-psychotics and introducing low-dose escitalopram. Results: Over the course of 6 months, the MHH gradually subsided, and the patient achieved the target bodyweight. The Glasgow Outcome Scale-Extended improved from 3 to 5. Conclusion: This is the first report on the use of escitalopram to manage secondary eating disorders. Our findings underscore the necessity to formally catalog and recognize disorders like MHH in diagnostic classifications to facilitate the systematic study of their pathophysiology, natural history, prognosis, and management strategies. © 2024 Taylor & Francis Group, LLC.
Taylor and Francis Ltd.
2699052
English
Article

author Zainudin M.F.; Yee C.M.; Nyein Yin K.
spellingShingle Zainudin M.F.; Yee C.M.; Nyein Yin K.
Morbid hunger and hyperphagia post-traumatic brain injury in a young male: good prognosis with escitalopram and multidisciplinary rehabilitation
author_facet Zainudin M.F.; Yee C.M.; Nyein Yin K.
author_sort Zainudin M.F.; Yee C.M.; Nyein Yin K.
title Morbid hunger and hyperphagia post-traumatic brain injury in a young male: good prognosis with escitalopram and multidisciplinary rehabilitation
title_short Morbid hunger and hyperphagia post-traumatic brain injury in a young male: good prognosis with escitalopram and multidisciplinary rehabilitation
title_full Morbid hunger and hyperphagia post-traumatic brain injury in a young male: good prognosis with escitalopram and multidisciplinary rehabilitation
title_fullStr Morbid hunger and hyperphagia post-traumatic brain injury in a young male: good prognosis with escitalopram and multidisciplinary rehabilitation
title_full_unstemmed Morbid hunger and hyperphagia post-traumatic brain injury in a young male: good prognosis with escitalopram and multidisciplinary rehabilitation
title_sort Morbid hunger and hyperphagia post-traumatic brain injury in a young male: good prognosis with escitalopram and multidisciplinary rehabilitation
publishDate 2024
container_title Brain Injury
container_volume 38
container_issue 13
doi_str_mv 10.1080/02699052.2024.2378838
url https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85198631846&doi=10.1080%2f02699052.2024.2378838&partnerID=40&md5=e5790c5ee45b204326014d0e6ef262b3
description Objective: Morbid hunger and hyperphagia (MHH) is a rare neurological disorder that can manifest following damage to the right frontal and temporal lobes. It can lead to detrimental short and long-term complications such as electrolyte imbalances, obesity, and cardiovascular diseases. This report details the case of a young male patient who developed MHH five months post-traumatic brain injury. Method: Single-case report. The patient exhibited colossal appetite, overeating, food-demanding behavior, and rapid weight gain. The prescription of quetiapine to manage his visual and auditory hallucinations was suspected of exacerbating the hyperphagia. A comprehensive, multidisciplinary rehabilitation approach was implemented, encompassing a meticulous dietary regime, environmental modifications, behavioral management, physical activities, therapeutic exercises, and pharmacological interventions, which included switching the anti-psychotics and introducing low-dose escitalopram. Results: Over the course of 6 months, the MHH gradually subsided, and the patient achieved the target bodyweight. The Glasgow Outcome Scale-Extended improved from 3 to 5. Conclusion: This is the first report on the use of escitalopram to manage secondary eating disorders. Our findings underscore the necessity to formally catalog and recognize disorders like MHH in diagnostic classifications to facilitate the systematic study of their pathophysiology, natural history, prognosis, and management strategies. © 2024 Taylor & Francis Group, LLC.
publisher Taylor and Francis Ltd.
issn 2699052
language English
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