1. A Ventricular Assist Device Recipient and Suicidality: Multidisciplinary Collaboration With a Psychiatrically Distressed Patient.
- Author
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Balliet WE, Madan A, Craig ML, Serber ER, Borckardt JJ, Pelic C, Barth K, Hale A, van Bakel AB, and Peura JL
- Subjects
- Adult, Humans, Male, Depressive Disorder psychology, Heart Failure psychology, Heart Failure therapy, Heart-Assist Devices, Suicide psychology
- Abstract
Background: Ventricular assist device (VAD) recipients are at high risk of depression and anxiety, and poor psychosocial functioning is associated with worse medical outcomes., Purpose: We present a case of a 31-year-old depressed patient who demonstrated passive suicidal behavior through multiple episodes of noncompliance, including temporarily discontinuing warfarin (Coumadin) several months after VAD implantation. The patient's psychosocial and medical histories and outcomes are presented., Conclusions: This case underscores the importance of pre-VAD as well and ongoing psychosocial evaluation and management for this unique patient population., Clinical Implications: Medical teams who are treating patients with cardiovascular disease who are under consideration for VAD or heart transplantation need to be aware of the multitude of ways in which patients can express depressed and suicidal mood and work with a multidisciplinary team to treat such symptoms to optimize patients' success with VAD/heart transplantation., Competing Interests: The authors have no conflicts of interest that are directly relevant to the content of this study. One table is presented
- Published
- 2017
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