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Depressive symptoms and executive functioning in stroke patients: a follow-up study

โœ Scribed by A. Bour; S. Rasquin; M. Limburg; F. Verhey


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
2010
Tongue
English
Weight
149 KB
Volume
26
Category
Article
ISSN
0885-6230

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โœฆ Synopsis


Abstract

Background

Cognitive and emotional sequellae are commonly observed in stroke patients and these symptoms often coโ€occur. Diagnosis can be difficult since symptoms of depression and executive dysfunction overlap.

Objective

To study the longitudinal relationship between depressive symptoms and executive dysfunction in stroke patients.

Methods

The study comprises of 116 firstโ€ever stroke patients who were followedโ€up for 2โ€‰years and who were assessed for emotional and cognitive sequellae after 1, 6, 12, and 24โ€‰months. Emotional disturbances were evaluated using the SCLโ€90 depression subscale. Executive functions were assessed using compound scores of a combination of the interference scores of the Stroop Colour Word Test and the Concept Shifting Test.

Results

Twentyโ€five patients suffered from both depressive symptoms and executive dysfunction, 28 patients were depressed with no signs of executive dysfunction, and 13 patients showed executive dysfunction with no depressive symptoms. Patients with executive dysfunction had higher mean SCLโ€90โ€D scores compared to patients with no executive dysfunction (30.9 (SD 11.7) versus 26.2 (SD 11.1, pโ€‰=โ€‰0.037). Depressive symptoms were predictive for executive dysfunction in a regression analysis corrected for age, sex, and diabetes mellitus but not after additional correction for preโ€existent brain damage and other vascular risk factors. After 2โ€‰years 66.6 and 53.3% of patients with both depressive symptoms and executive dysfunction at baseline still had depressive symptoms and executive dysfunctions respectively and had worse prognostic outcome than patients with depressive symptoms or executive dysfunction alone.

Conclusions

Symptoms of depression and executive dysfunction are highly prevalent in stroke patients and often coโ€occur. These patients are more at risk for poor stroke outcome, chronic depression, and cognitive deterioration. Copyright ยฉ 2010 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.


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