Post-Stroke Apathy: An Exploratory Longitudinal Study

被引:40
作者
Caeiro, Lara [1 ]
Ferro, Jose M. [2 ]
e Melo, Teresa Pinho [2 ]
Canhao, Patricia [2 ]
Figueira, M. Luisa [3 ]
机构
[1] Univ Lisbon, Hosp Santa Maria, Inst Mol Med, P-1699 Lisbon, Portugal
[2] Univ Lisbon, Hosp Santa Maria, Neurol Serv, Stroke Unit, P-1699 Lisbon, Portugal
[3] Univ Lisbon, Hosp Santa Maria, Dept Neurosci, Psychiat Serv, P-1699 Lisbon, Portugal
关键词
Apathy; Cognitive impairment; Depression; Executive functions; Stroke; ACUTE STROKE; FUNCTIONAL RECOVERY; LAUSANNE EMOTION; LESION LOCATION; DEPRESSION; INFARCTION; SYMPTOMS; CLASSIFICATION; RELIABILITY; IMPAIRMENT;
D O I
10.1159/000350202
中图分类号
R74 [神经病学与精神病学];
学科分类号
摘要
Introduction: Post-stroke apathy is a disturbance of motivation evidenced by low initiative, difficulties in starting, sustaining or finishing any goal-directed activity, low self-activation or self-initiated behavior and emotional indifference. Apathy is a common behavioral disturbance in stroke survivors. We aimed to analyze the relationship between poststroke apathy at 1 year after stroke and (1) apathy in acute phase; (2) demographic, pre-stroke predisposing conditions (previous mild cognitive impairment, alcohol abuse, mood/anxiety disorder) and clinical features (stroke type and location, neurological symptoms); (3) post-stroke depression and post-stroke cognitive impairment, and (4) post-stroke functional outcome, quality of life and the perception of health. Methods: Consecutive stroke (infarct/intracerebral hemorrhage) patients without aphasia or consciousness disturbances were included in the acute phase of stroke and assessed at 1 year after stroke. We assessed apathy with the clinically rated version of the Apathy Evaluation Scale. We also assessed post-stroke depression (Montgomery Asberg Depression Rating Scale) and post-stroke cognitive impairment (attention, mental flexibility, verbal, motor and graphomotor initiative, and non-verbal and verbal abstract reasoning, and Mini-Mental State Examination), functional outcome (Barthel Index), quality of life and perception of health (EuroQol). Data were analyzed using bivariate associations (. 2 and t test) and stepwise multivariate analysis. Results: We included 76 stroke patients [32.9% women, mean age 62.9 years (SD = 10.9) and a mean of 6.9 (SD = 4.3) years of education]. Apathy was present in 17 patients in the acute phase and in 18 (23.7%) patients at 1 year after stroke. At 1 year after stroke, 41% of the acute apathetic patients remained apathetic. Sixty-one percent of new cases of post-stroke apathy were detected. Post-stroke apathy was associated only with previous cognitive impairment, apathy in acute stroke, poststroke cognitive impairment, verbal abstract reasoning and with worse Barthel Index scale scores. In the multivariate logistic regression model, verbal abstract reasoning (odds ratio, OR = 7.03) and apathy in acute stroke (OR = 3.8) were identified as independent factors for post-stroke apathy at 1 year. Apathetic patients did not report worse quality of life or health. Conclusion: Apathy in acute stroke phase was a reliable indicator of post-stroke apathy. Apathy should be assessed in both phases. Verbal abstract reasoning impairment was also an independent factor for post-stroke apathy impairing patients' ability to reason about goal-directed activity. Even though apathetic patients had worse post-stroke functional outcome, they did not report losing quality of life or having worse health. Copyright (C) 2013 S. Karger AG, Basel
引用
收藏
页码:507 / 513
页数:7
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