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Effect of cognitive behavioral intervention on anxiety, depression, and quality of life in patients with epilepsy.

Authors :
Feng HX
Wang MX
Zhao HM
Hou XX
Xu B
Gui Q
Wu GH
Dong XF
Xu QR
Shen MQ
Shi QR
Cheng QZ
Xue SR
Source :
American journal of translational research [Am J Transl Res] 2022 Jul 15; Vol. 14 (7), pp. 5077-5087. Date of Electronic Publication: 2022 Jul 15 (Print Publication: 2022).
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Objective: This study aimed to investigate the effect of cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) on quality of life, anxiety, and depression in patients with epilepsy.<br />Methods: Each study subject was randomly assigned to a CBT (n=46) or control (n=49) group (1:1 ratio), and the first group underwent an 8-week CBT treatment. Anxiety, depression, and quality of life (QOLIE-31) were assessed at both baseline and endpoint using the Self-Rating Anxiety Scale (SAS), Hamilton Depression Scale (HDMA) and quality of life in Epilepsy-31 (QOLIE-31) scales. The statistical analyses included between-and within-group comparisons of the effects of CBT on these measures and associations with demographic and clinical variables.<br />Results: No differences were found between variables at baseline (P>0.05). The repeated-measures analyses found that CBT group had greater improvement in depression score compared to the control group ( P <0.05). The analysis of anxiety score showed that compared to the control group, CBT intervention had no statistical significance in the total anxiety population. However, the CBT intervention decreased anxiety in women and Combined-drug group ( P <0.05). The CBT group had greater improvement in overall score, medication effect, and seizure worry score than the control group ( P <0.05). Stratified analysis found total and medication effects score of CBT intervention group for the combined-drug group were higher than those of the single drug group ( P <0.05).<br />Conclusion: Increases in overall scores, seizure worry, cognitive functioning, and medication effect were better in the CBT group. CBT can improve anxiety, depression, and quality of life in patients with epilepsy. Women and combined-drug patients with epilepsy benefit most from CBT.<br />Competing Interests: None.<br /> (AJTR Copyright © 2022.)

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1943-8141
Volume :
14
Issue :
7
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
American journal of translational research
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
35958485