Publication | Closed Access
Lateralization of dementia of depression in stroke patients
134
Citations
27
References
1989
Year
NeuropsychologyCognitive RehabilitationStroke PatientsSocial SciencesStroke RehabilitationAlzheimer's DiseaseSubcortical Ischemic DepressionNeurologyNeurorehabilitationPsychiatryPoststroke Major DepressionMedicineDepressionRehabilitationCerebral Blood FlowCognitive PerformanceVascular Cognitive DisorderDementiaStroke-related ConditionMajor DepressionStroke
In a group of stroke patients with left-hemisphere lesions, those with major depression performed significantly below nondepressed patients on four of nine cognitive domains examined with a neuropsychological test battery. Among patients with right-hemisphere stroke, those with major depression did not perform below nondepressed patients on any of the nine cognitive domains. The differential effect of depression on cognitive performance between left- and right-hemisphere lesion groups could not be accounted for by demographic variables, neurological symptoms, lesion location, or lesion size. Poststroke major depression appeared to produce a decline in cognitive performance or dementia of depression that depended on the laterality of the lesion.
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