AI Article Synopsis

  • Depressive symptoms after a stroke can lead to negative outcomes, such as reduced functional ability and increased mortality, but they don't hinder motor recovery in patients undergoing Constraint-Induced Movement Therapy (CIMT).
  • A study involved 40 stroke survivors with mild to moderate upper-extremity issues, assessing their depressive symptoms and motor activity before and after CIMT using specific scales.
  • Results showed that depressive symptoms did not predict motor recovery outcomes, and participants experienced a small but significant decrease in depression levels after CIMT, suggesting therapy may both help motor skills and improve mood.

Article Abstract

Objective: Depressive symptoms after stroke have been associated with negative outcomes, including poorer functional ability, less efficient use of rehabilitation services, decreased quality of life, and increased mortality. It has been anecdotally noted that depressive symptoms do not limit motor recovery in patients who undergo Constraint-Induced Movement Therapy (CIMT), an efficacious intervention for chronic poststroke hemiparesis. Here we analyze depressive symptom and motor scores from 40 participants who received CIMT in 2 previously published studies.

Method: Adults more than 1-year after stroke with mild to moderate upper-extremity hemiparesis completed the Zung Self-Rating Depression Scale and Motor Activity Log (MAL) before and after CIMT. We used regression analysis to test whether Zung scores predicted response to CIMT and paired t tests to test whether depressive symptoms changed from pre- to posttreatment.

Results: Pretreatment Zung score did not predict outcome on the MAL Arm Use scale, ΔR2 (1, 30) = 0.004, p = .19, after controlling for pretreatment MAL scores. Additionally, participants had a small but statistically significant decrease in Zung score, t(39) = 3.0, p = .005, mean change = -3.6.

Conclusion: These results suggest that depressive symptoms do not significantly limit motor recovery in patients treated with CIMT for chronic poststroke hemiparesis. Additionally, treatment with CIMT may improve depressive symptoms. (PsycINFO Database Record

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5745035PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1037/rep0000171DOI Listing

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