University Hospital Cologne, Department of Neurology, Cologne 50937, Germany.
University Hospital Cologne, Department of Neurology, Cologne 50937, Germany; Institute of Neuroscience and Medicine, Cognitive Neuroscience (INM-3), Forschungszentrum Jülich, Jülich 52428, Germany.
Neuroimage Clin. 2024;41:103586. doi: 10.1016/j.nicl.2024.103586. Epub 2024 Feb 27.
Emotion processing deficits are known to accompany depressive symptoms and are often seen in stroke patients. Little is known about the influence of post-stroke depressive (PSD) symptoms and specific brain lesions on altered emotion processing abilities and how these phenomena develop over time. This potential relationship may impact post-stroke rehabilitation of neurological and psychosocial function. To address this scientific gap, we investigated the relationship between PSD symptoms and emotion processing abilities in a longitudinal study design from the first days post-stroke into the early chronic phase.
Twenty-six ischemic stroke patients performed an emotion processing task on videos with emotional faces ('happy,' 'sad,' 'anger,' 'fear,' and 'neutral') at different intensity levels (20%, 40%, 60%, 80%, 100%). Recognition accuracies and response times were measured, as well as scores of depressive symptoms (Montgomery-Åsberg Depression Rating Scale). Twenty-eight healthy participants matched in age and sex were included as a control group. Whole-brain support-vector regression lesion-symptom mapping (SVR-LSM) analyses were performed to investigate whether specific lesion locations were associated with the recognition accuracy of specific emotion categories.
Stroke patients performed worse in overall recognition accuracy compared to controls, specifically in the recognition of happy, sad, and fearful faces. Notably, more depressed stroke patients showed an increased processing towards specific negative emotions, as they responded significantly faster to angry faces and recognized sad faces of low intensities significantly more accurately. These effects obtained for the first days after stroke partly persisted to follow-up assessment several months later. SVR-LSM analyses revealed that inferior and middle frontal regions (IFG/MFG) and insula and putamen were associated with emotion-recognition deficits in stroke. Specifically, recognizing happy facial expressions was influenced by lesions affecting the anterior insula, putamen, IFG, MFG, orbitofrontal cortex, and rolandic operculum. Lesions in the posterior insula, rolandic operculum, and MFG were also related to reduced recognition accuracy of fearful facial expressions, whereas recognition deficits of sad faces were associated with frontal pole, IFG, and MFG damage.
PSD symptoms facilitate processing negative emotional stimuli, specifically angry and sad facial expressions. The recognition accuracy of different emotional categories was linked to brain lesions in emotion-related processing circuits, including insula, basal ganglia, IFG, and MFG. In summary, our study provides support for psychosocial and neural factors underlying emotional processing after stroke, contributing to the pathophysiology of PSD.
情绪处理缺陷伴随着抑郁症状,在中风患者中经常出现。然而,对于中风后抑郁(PSD)症状和特定脑损伤对情绪处理能力的影响,以及这些现象随时间的发展变化,人们知之甚少。这种潜在的关系可能会影响中风后的神经和社会心理功能康复。为了填补这一科学空白,我们采用从中风后第一天到早期慢性期的纵向研究设计,调查 PSD 症状与情绪处理能力之间的关系。
26 名缺血性中风患者在不同强度水平(20%、40%、60%、80%、100%)的情绪面孔视频(“高兴”、“悲伤”、“愤怒”、“恐惧”和“中性”)上执行情绪处理任务。测量识别准确率和反应时间,以及抑郁症状评分(蒙哥马利-阿斯伯格抑郁评定量表)。纳入 28 名年龄和性别匹配的健康参与者作为对照组。进行全脑支持向量回归病灶-症状映射(SVR-LSM)分析,以调查特定病灶位置是否与特定情绪类别的识别准确性相关。
与对照组相比,中风患者的整体识别准确率较低,特别是在识别高兴、悲伤和恐惧面孔时。值得注意的是,抑郁程度较高的中风患者对特定负性情绪的处理能力增强,因为他们对愤怒面孔的反应明显更快,对低强度的悲伤面孔的识别准确性显著提高。这些在中风后第一天的影响在几个月后的随访评估中部分持续存在。SVR-LSM 分析表明,额下回和额中回(IFG/MFG)、岛叶和壳核与中风后的情绪识别缺陷有关。具体而言,识别高兴的面部表情受到影响,影响因素包括前岛叶、壳核、IFG、MFG、眶额皮质和 Rolandic 岛盖。后岛叶、Rolandic 岛盖和 MFG 的损伤也与恐惧面部表情识别准确性的降低有关,而悲伤面孔的识别缺陷与额极、IFG 和 MFG 的损伤有关。
PSD 症状促进了对负性情绪刺激的处理,特别是愤怒和悲伤的面部表情。不同情绪类别的识别准确性与情绪处理回路中的脑损伤有关,包括岛叶、基底节、IFG 和 MFG。总之,我们的研究为中风后情绪处理的心理社会和神经因素提供了支持,有助于 PSD 的病理生理学研究。