Department of Neurology, University Hospital Cologne, 50937 Cologne, Germany.
Institute of Neuroscience and Medicine, Cognitive Neuroscience (INM-3), Forschungszentrum Jülich, 52425 Juelich, Germany.
Neuroimage Clin. 2023;37:103360. doi: 10.1016/j.nicl.2023.103360. Epub 2023 Mar 1.
Although post-stroke depression (PSD) is known to disrupt motor rehabilitation after stroke, PSD is often undertreated and its relationship with motor impairment remains poorly understood.
In a longitudinal study design we investigated, which factors at the early post-acute stage may increase the risk for PSD symptoms. We were especially interested in whether interindividual differences in the motivational drive to engage in physically demanding tasks indicate PSD development in patients suffering from motor impairments. Accordingly, we used a monetary incentive grip force task where participants were asked to hold their grip force for high and low rewards at stake to maximize their monetary outcome. Individual grip force was normalized according to the maximal force prior to the experiment. Experimental data, depression, and motor impairment were assessed from 20 stroke patients (12 male; 7.7 ± 6.78 days post-stroke) with mild-to-moderate hand motor impairment and 24 age-matched healthy participants (12 male).
Both groups showed incentive motivation as indicated by stronger grip force for high versus low reward trials and the overall monetary outcome in the task. In stroke patients, severely impaired patients showed stronger incentive motivation, whereas early PSD symptoms were associated with reduced incentive motivation in the task. Larger lesions in corticostriatal tracts correlated with reduced incentive motivation. Importantly, chronic motivational deficits were preceded by initially reduced incentive motivation and larger corticostriatal lesions in the early stage post-stroke.
More severe motor impairment motivates reward-dependent motor engagement, whereas PSD and corticostriatal lesions potentially disturb incentive motivational behavior, thereby increasing the risk of chronic motivational PSD symptoms. Acute interventions should address motivational aspects of behavior to improve motor rehabilitation post-stroke.
尽管卒中后抑郁(PSD)已知会干扰卒中后的运动康复,但 PSD 常常治疗不足,其与运动障碍的关系仍知之甚少。
在一项纵向研究设计中,我们研究了早期急性期哪些因素可能增加 PSD 症状的风险。我们特别关注个体在参与需要体力的任务的动机驱动力方面的差异是否表明患有运动障碍的患者中 PSD 的发展。因此,我们使用了一个货币激励握力任务,要求参与者在高和低奖励的情况下保持握力,以最大限度地提高他们的货币收益。个体握力根据实验前的最大力进行归一化。实验数据、抑郁和运动障碍是从 20 名轻度至中度手部运动障碍的卒中患者(男性 12 名;卒中后 7.7±6.78 天)和 24 名年龄匹配的健康参与者中评估的。
两组都表现出激励动机,表现在高奖励与低奖励试验时的握力更强,以及任务的整体货币收益。在卒中患者中,严重受损的患者表现出更强的激励动机,而早期 PSD 症状与任务中激励动机的降低有关。皮质纹状体束中的较大病变与激励动机的降低相关。重要的是,慢性动机缺陷是由卒中后早期最初降低的激励动机和较大的皮质纹状体病变引起的。
更严重的运动障碍激发了奖励依赖性的运动参与,而 PSD 和皮质纹状体病变可能干扰激励动机行为,从而增加慢性 PSD 症状的风险。急性干预措施应解决行为的动机方面,以改善卒中后的运动康复。