University of Delaware, Newark, DE.
VA Pittsburgh Health Care System, Pittsburgh, PA.
J Commun Disord. 2022 Nov-Dec;100:106266. doi: 10.1016/j.jcomdis.2022.106266. Epub 2022 Sep 20.
Depression may influence treatment participation and outcomes of people with post-stroke aphasia, yet its prevalence and associated characteristics in aphasia are poorly understood. Using retrospective data from an overarching experimental study, we examined depressive symptoms and their relationship to demographic and language characteristics in people with chronic aphasia. As a secondary objective, we compared prevalence of depressive symptoms among the overarching study's included and excluded participants.
We examined retrospective data from 121 individuals with chronic aphasia including depression scale scores, demographic information (sex, age, time post onset of stroke, education, race/ethnicity, and Veteran status), and scores on assessments of general and modality-specific language impairments.
Approximately 50% of participants reported symptoms indicative of depressive disorders: 23% indicative of major depression and 27% indicative of mild depression. Sex (males) and comparatively younger age emerged as statistically significant variables associated with depressive symptoms; naming ability was minimally associated with depressive symptoms. Time post onset of stroke, education level, race/ethnicity, Veteran status, and aphasia severity were not significantly associated with depressive symptoms. Depression-scale scores were significantly higher for individuals excluded from the overarching study compared to those who were included.
The rate of depressive disorders in this sample was higher than rates of depression reported in the general stroke literature. Participant sex, age, and naming ability emerged as factors associated with depressive symptoms, though these links appear complex, especially given variable reports from prior research. Importantly, depressive symptoms do not appear to diminish over time for individuals with chronic aphasia. Given these results and the relatively limited documentation of depression in aphasia literature, depression remains a pressing concern for aphasia research and routine clinical care.
抑郁可能会影响脑卒中后失语症患者的治疗参与度和治疗结果,但目前尚不清楚失语症患者中抑郁的患病率及其相关特征。本研究使用一项大型实验研究的回顾性数据,调查了慢性失语症患者的抑郁症状及其与人口统计学和语言特征的关系。作为次要目标,我们比较了纳入和排除的研究参与者中抑郁症状的患病率。
我们对 121 名慢性失语症患者的回顾性数据进行了研究,包括抑郁量表评分、人口统计学信息(性别、年龄、脑卒中后发病时间、教育程度、种族/民族和退伍军人身份)以及一般和模态特异性语言障碍评估的评分。
约 50%的参与者报告了有抑郁障碍症状:23%为重度抑郁,27%为轻度抑郁。性别(男性)和相对较年轻的年龄是与抑郁症状相关的统计学显著变量;命名能力与抑郁症状有一定关联。脑卒中后发病时间、教育程度、种族/民族、退伍军人身份和失语症严重程度与抑郁症状无显著关联。与纳入大型研究的参与者相比,被排除在研究之外的个体的抑郁量表评分显著更高。
该样本中抑郁障碍的发生率高于一般脑卒中文献中报道的抑郁发生率。参与者的性别、年龄和命名能力是与抑郁症状相关的因素,但这些关联似乎很复杂,尤其是考虑到之前研究的不同报告。重要的是,慢性失语症患者的抑郁症状似乎不会随着时间的推移而减轻。鉴于这些结果以及失语症文献中对抑郁的相对有限的记录,抑郁仍然是失语症研究和常规临床护理的一个紧迫问题。