Abstract
Summary
Diagnosis of post-stroke depression (PSD) is extremely difficult due to
concomitant focal cognitive disturbances or generalized intellectual
impairment, and, in some cases, dissociation of mood and affective behavior.
The diagnosis has been standardized on the basis of psychiatric criteria in
the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual (DSM)-III, an approach that has been
criticized for taking into account non-specific stroke-related somatic
symptoms. Yet evaluation of the PSD diagnosis by comparing the severity of
depressive symptoms in stroke to an age-matched population sample and by
conducting a controlled antidepressant treatment study in unselected PSD
patients has failed to disclose any evidence that non-specific symptoms
influence the diagnosis of PSD. The prognosis, however, of early vs late
diagnosed PSD and the response to treatment of early vs late diagnosed PSD
differ, indicating that PSD diagnosed according to DSM-III criteria covers a
heterogeneous group of etiologically different conditions.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Psychiatry and Mental health
Cited by
17 articles.
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