Poststroke apathy: Major role of cognitive, ...
Type de document :
Article dans une revue scientifique: Article original
URL permanente :
Titre :
Poststroke apathy: Major role of cognitive, depressive and neurological disorders over imaging determinants
Auteur(s) :
Aubignat, Mickael [Auteur]
GRECogVASC study group
Roussel, Martine [Auteur]
GRECogVASC study group
Aarabi, Ardalan [Auteur]
GRECogVASC study group
Lamy, Chantal [Auteur]
GRECogVASC study group
Andriuta, Daniela [Auteur]
GRECogVASC study group
Tasseel-Ponche, Sophie [Auteur]
GRECogVASC study group
Makki, Malek [Auteur]
GRECogVASC study group
Godefroy, Olivier [Auteur]
GRECogVASC study group
Barbay, Mélanie [Auteur]
Canaple, Sandrine [Auteur]
Leclercq, Claire [Auteur]
Arnoux, Audrey [Auteur]
Despretz-Wannepain, Sandrine [Auteur]
Despretz, Pascal [Auteur]
Université de Lille
Berrissoul, Hassan [Auteur]
Picard, Carl [Auteur]
Diouf, Momar [Auteur]
Loas, Gwénolé [Auteur]
Deramond, Hervé [Auteur]
Taillia, Hervé [Auteur]
Ardisson, Anne-Emmanuelle [Auteur]
Nédélec-Ciceri, Claudine [Auteur]
Bonnin, Camille [Auteur]
Thomas-Anterion, Catherine [Auteur]
Vincent-Grangette, Francoise [Auteur]
Varvat, Jérome [Auteur]
Quaglino, Véronique [Auteur]
Beaunieux, Hélène [Auteur]
Moroni, Christine [Auteur]
Université de Lille, Sciences Humaines et Sociales
Martens-Chazelles, Audrey [Auteur]
Batier-Monperrus, Stéphanie [Auteur]
Monteleone, Cécile [Auteur]
Costantino, Véronique [Auteur]
Theunssens, Eric [Auteur]
GRECogVASC study group
Roussel, Martine [Auteur]
GRECogVASC study group
Aarabi, Ardalan [Auteur]
GRECogVASC study group
Lamy, Chantal [Auteur]
GRECogVASC study group
Andriuta, Daniela [Auteur]
GRECogVASC study group
Tasseel-Ponche, Sophie [Auteur]
GRECogVASC study group
Makki, Malek [Auteur]
GRECogVASC study group
Godefroy, Olivier [Auteur]
GRECogVASC study group
Barbay, Mélanie [Auteur]
Canaple, Sandrine [Auteur]
Leclercq, Claire [Auteur]
Arnoux, Audrey [Auteur]
Despretz-Wannepain, Sandrine [Auteur]
Despretz, Pascal [Auteur]
Université de Lille
Berrissoul, Hassan [Auteur]
Picard, Carl [Auteur]
Diouf, Momar [Auteur]
Loas, Gwénolé [Auteur]
Deramond, Hervé [Auteur]
Taillia, Hervé [Auteur]
Ardisson, Anne-Emmanuelle [Auteur]
Nédélec-Ciceri, Claudine [Auteur]
Bonnin, Camille [Auteur]
Thomas-Anterion, Catherine [Auteur]
Vincent-Grangette, Francoise [Auteur]
Varvat, Jérome [Auteur]
Quaglino, Véronique [Auteur]
Beaunieux, Hélène [Auteur]
Moroni, Christine [Auteur]
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Université de Lille, Sciences Humaines et Sociales
Martens-Chazelles, Audrey [Auteur]
Batier-Monperrus, Stéphanie [Auteur]
Monteleone, Cécile [Auteur]
Costantino, Véronique [Auteur]
Theunssens, Eric [Auteur]
Titre de la revue :
Cortex
Nom court de la revue :
Cortex
Numéro :
160
Pagination :
55-66
Éditeur :
Elsevier BV
Date de publication :
2023-03
ISSN :
0010-9452
Discipline(s) HAL :
Sciences cognitives
Résumé en anglais : [en]
Apathy occurs in approximately one third of people after stroke. Despite its frequency and functional consequences, the determinants of apathy have only been partially defined. The major difficulty lies in disentangling ...
Lire la suite >Apathy occurs in approximately one third of people after stroke. Despite its frequency and functional consequences, the determinants of apathy have only been partially defined. The major difficulty lies in disentangling the reduction in activity due to apathy itself from those secondary to comorbidities, such as depression, sensorimotor deficits, and cognitive impairment. Here, we aimed to examine the prevalence of apathy, identify confounding sources of hypoactivity, and define its neuroimaging determinants using multivariate voxel lesion symptom-mapping (mVLSM) analyses. We assessed apathy in a subgroup (n = 325, mean age: 63.8 ± 10.5 years, 91.1% ischemic stroke) of the GRECogVASC cohort using the validated Behavioral Dysexecutive Syndrome Inventory, interpreted using GREFEX criteria, as well as confounding factors (depression, anxiety, severity of the neurological deficit, and gait disorders). mVLSM analysis was used to define neuroimaging determinants and was repeated after controlling for confounding factors. Apathy was present for 120 patients (36.9%, 95% CI: 31.7–42.2). Stepwise linear regression identified three factors associated with apathy: depressive symptoms (R2 = .3, p = .0001), cognitive impairment (R2 = .015, p = .02), and neurological deficit (R2 = .110, p = .0001). Accordingly, only 9 (7.5%) patients had apathy without a confounding factor, i.e., isolated apathy. In conventional VLSM analysis, apathy was associated with a large number of subcortical lesions that were no longer considered after controlling for confounding factors. Strategic site analysis identified five regions associated with isolated apathy: the F3 orbitalis pars, left amygdala, left thalamus, left pallidum, and mesencephalon. mVLSM analysis identified four strategic sites associated with apathy: the right corticospinal tract (R2 = .11; p = .0001), left frontostriatal tract (R2 = .11; p = .0001), left thalamus (R2 = .04; p = .0001), and left amygdala (R2 = .01; p = .013). These regions remained significant after controlling for confounding factors but explained a lower amount of variance. These findings indicate that poststroke apathy is more strongly associated with depression, neurological deficit, and cognitive impairment than with stroke lesions locations, at least using VLSM analysis.Lire moins >
Lire la suite >Apathy occurs in approximately one third of people after stroke. Despite its frequency and functional consequences, the determinants of apathy have only been partially defined. The major difficulty lies in disentangling the reduction in activity due to apathy itself from those secondary to comorbidities, such as depression, sensorimotor deficits, and cognitive impairment. Here, we aimed to examine the prevalence of apathy, identify confounding sources of hypoactivity, and define its neuroimaging determinants using multivariate voxel lesion symptom-mapping (mVLSM) analyses. We assessed apathy in a subgroup (n = 325, mean age: 63.8 ± 10.5 years, 91.1% ischemic stroke) of the GRECogVASC cohort using the validated Behavioral Dysexecutive Syndrome Inventory, interpreted using GREFEX criteria, as well as confounding factors (depression, anxiety, severity of the neurological deficit, and gait disorders). mVLSM analysis was used to define neuroimaging determinants and was repeated after controlling for confounding factors. Apathy was present for 120 patients (36.9%, 95% CI: 31.7–42.2). Stepwise linear regression identified three factors associated with apathy: depressive symptoms (R2 = .3, p = .0001), cognitive impairment (R2 = .015, p = .02), and neurological deficit (R2 = .110, p = .0001). Accordingly, only 9 (7.5%) patients had apathy without a confounding factor, i.e., isolated apathy. In conventional VLSM analysis, apathy was associated with a large number of subcortical lesions that were no longer considered after controlling for confounding factors. Strategic site analysis identified five regions associated with isolated apathy: the F3 orbitalis pars, left amygdala, left thalamus, left pallidum, and mesencephalon. mVLSM analysis identified four strategic sites associated with apathy: the right corticospinal tract (R2 = .11; p = .0001), left frontostriatal tract (R2 = .11; p = .0001), left thalamus (R2 = .04; p = .0001), and left amygdala (R2 = .01; p = .013). These regions remained significant after controlling for confounding factors but explained a lower amount of variance. These findings indicate that poststroke apathy is more strongly associated with depression, neurological deficit, and cognitive impairment than with stroke lesions locations, at least using VLSM analysis.Lire moins >
Langue :
Anglais
Comité de lecture :
Oui
Audience :
Internationale
Vulgarisation :
Non
Établissement(s) :
Université de Lille
Équipe(s) de recherche :
Neuropsychologie & Audition
Date de dépôt :
2024-09-28T10:17:52Z
2024-10-09T06:25:13Z
2024-10-09T06:25:13Z