| Literature DB >> 18728805 |
Abstract
Mood depression is a common and serious complication after stroke. According to epidemiological studies, nearly 30% of stroke patients develop depression, either in the early or in the late stages after stroke. Although depression may affect functional recovery and quality of life after stroke, such condition is often ignored. In fact, only a minority of patients is diagnosed and even fewer are treated in the common clinical practice. Moreover, the real benefits of antidepressant (AD) therapy in post-stroke depression have not been fully clarified. In fact, controlled studies on the effectiveness of ADs in post stroke depression (PSD) are relatively few. Today, data available suggest that ADs may be generally effective in improving mood, but guidelines for the optimal treatment and its length are still lacking.Entities:
Keywords: antidepressant; depression; stroke
Year: 2008 PMID: 18728805 PMCID: PMC2515899 DOI: 10.2147/ndt.s2017
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Neuropsychiatr Dis Treat ISSN: 1176-6328 Impact factor: 2.570
Prevalence of PSD according to time and setting of evaluation
| Authors | n | Population | Country | Time | Criteria | % |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Folstein et al 1977 | 20 | Rehab hosp | USA | 1 m | HDRS/PSE | 45 |
| Robinson et al 1981 | 18 | hospital-based | USA | <1 m | HDRS, ZSRDS | 61 |
| Feibel et al 1982 | 91 | outpatient | USA | 6 m | Nursing evaluation | 26 |
| Robinson et al 1983 | 103 | hospital-based | USA | 1 m | HDRS, PSE,DSM-III | 47 |
| 64 | Rehab hosp | CND | <2 m | ZSRDS | 47 | |
| Ebrahim et al 1987 | 149 | hospital-based | UK | 6 m | GHQ | 23 |
| Wade et al 1987 | 379 | Community | UK | <1 m | WDI | 22 |
| Eastwood et al 1989 | 87 | Rehab hosp | CND | 21 d- 6 m | HDRS, GDS | 50 |
| Finset et al 1989 | 42 | Rehab hosp | Norway | 6 m | GCRD | 36 |
| Malec et al 1990 | 20 | Rehab hosp | USA | 1 m | HDRS | 35 |
| Morris et al 1990 | 99 | rehab hosp | AU | 2 m | MADRS/CIDI | 35 |
| Parikh et al 1990 | 63 | hospital-based | USA | <1 m | HDRS, PSE,DSM-III | 39 |
| 205 | hospital-based | USA | <1 m | HDRS, PSE,DSM-III | 41 | |
| House et al 1991 | 89 | community | UK | 1 m | PSE, DSM-III | 23 |
| 18 | rehab hosp | USA | 1.5 m | BDI, DSM-III | 72 | |
| Astrom et al 1993 | 80 | hospital-based | SW | 2 m | DSM-III | 25 |
| 91 | rehab hosp | USA | 7 m | DSM-III | 40 | |
| Andersen et al 1994 | 285 | hospital-based | DK | 1 m | HDRS | 21 |
| Burvill et al 1995 | 294 | community | AU | 4 m | PSE, DSM-III | 23 |
| Diamond et al 1995 | 14 | rehab hosp | USA | GDS | 36 | |
| 130 | rehab hosp | Belgium | 1 m | HDRS, MADRS | 37 | |
| Wilkinson et al 1997 | 96 | community | UK | 5 y | HADS | 36 |
| Ng et al 1995 | 52 | rehab hosp | Singapore | <1 m | DSM-III-R | 55 |
| 150 | hospital-based | CND | 3 m | MADRS | 27 | |
| Pohjasvaara et al 1998 | 277 | hospital-based | FIN | 3 m | DSM-III-R | 40 |
| 71 | outpatient | >1 y | MADRS/DSM-III | 48 | ||
| 321 | community | FIN | 3 m | BDI | 47 | |
| 82 | hospital-based | Hungary | 1 w | BDI | 15 | |
| Gainotti et al 1999 | 153 | rehab hosp | Italy | 2 m | HDRS | 32 |
| 106 | rehab hosp | FIN | 3 m | PSE, DSM-IIII-R | 53 | |
| 470 | rehab hosp | Italy | 1.5 m | HDRS | 27 | |
| 85 | rehab hosp | Netherlands | 20–40 d | DSM-III-R | 35 | |
| 89 | hospital-based | FIN | <1 m | BDI | 27 | |
| 243 | rehab hosp | USA | <1 m | GDS | 13 | |
| Vataja et al 2001 | 275 | outpatient | FIN | 3 m | PSE, DSM-IIII-R | 40 |
| Tang et al 2002 | 157 | rehab hosp | China | 1 m | DSM-III-R | 17 |
| Aben et al 2002 | 154 | hospital-based | Netherlands | 1 m | DSM-IV | 22 |
| Eriksson et al 2004 | 15747 | community | Sweden | 3 m | Self reported | 14 |
| Cassidy et al 2004 | 50 | rehab hosp | Ireland | 6 m | DSM-IV, HDRS | 20 |
| 195 | rehab hosp | USA | <1 m | DSM-III-R | 36 | |
| 110 | outpatient | France | 6 m | MADRS | 43 | |
| 70 | outpatient | FIN | 3 m | PSE, DSM-IIII-R | 37 | |
| Naess et al 2005 | 196 | outpatient | Norway | 6 y | MADRS | 29 |
| Paul et al 2006 | 441 | outpatient | Australia | 5 y | IDAS | 17 |
| Hackett et al 2006 | 739 | community | NZ | 6 m | GHQ | 27 |
| Jia et al 2006 | 5825 | hospital-based, retrospective | USA | 1 y | clinical | 41 |
| 1064 | hospital-based | Italy | 1 m | BDI, DSM-IV | 22 | |
| 125 | hospital-based | Australia | 1 m | HADS | 16 | |
| van de Port et al 2007 | 165 | outpatient | Netherlands | 3 y | CES-D | 19 |
| 149 | outpatient | Sweden | 20 m | DSM-III-R | 34 | |
| 164 | hospital-based | Australia | 3 m | DSM-III-R | 12 |
Abbreviations: d, days; m, months; y, years; BDI, Beck Depression Inventory; CES-D, Centre for Epidemiologic Studies Depression Scale; CIDI, Composite International Diagnostic Interview; DSM, Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorder; GCRD, Global Clinical Rating of Depressed mood; GDS, Geriatric Depression Scale; GHQ, General Health Questionnaire; HADS, Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale; HDRS, Hamilton Depression Rating Scale; MADRS, Montgomery Asberg Depression Rating Scale; IDAS, Irritability, Depression and Anxiety Scale; PSE, Present State Examination; WDI, Wakefield Depression inventory; ZSRDS, Zung Self Rating Depression Scale.
Percentages of patients treated with antidepressant in studies on prevalence of PSD
| Authors | n | Population | Country | % patients treated |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 64 | Rehab hosp | CND | 33 | |
| Ebrahim et al 1987 | 149 | hospital-based | UK | 15 |
| Parikh et al 1990 | 63 | hospital-based | USA | 8 |
| 150 | hospital-based | Canada | 19 | |
| Pohjasvaara et al 1998 | 277 | hospital-based | FIN | 39 |
| 321 | community | FIN | 17 | |
| 106 | rehab hosp | FIN | 36 | |
| 470 | rehab hosp | Italy | 100 | |
| 85 | rehab hosp | Netherlands | 20 | |
| Eriksson et al 2004 | 15747 | community | Sweden | 49 |
| Cassidy et al 2004 | 50 | rehab hosp | Ireland | 60 |
| Paul et al 2006 | 441 | outpatient | Australia | 22 |
| 1064 | hospital-based | Italy | 49 | |
| Jia et al 2006 | 5825 | hospital-based, retrospective | USA | 63 |
Controlled studies on treatment of post-stroke depression
| Authors | No | Treatment studied | Design | Time from stroke | Trial length | Outcome measures | Results |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 34 | nortryptiline vs placebo | DB | ≤18 m | 4–6 w | HDRS, ZSRDS | nortriptyline more effective than placebo in reduction of depression | |
| 27 | trazodone vs placebo | DB | 6 w | ~4–5 w | ZSRDS | trazodone trend towards better functional status | |
| Andersen et al 1994 | 66 | citalopram vs placebo | DB | 2–52 w | 16 w | HDRS | citalopram more effective than placebo in reduction of depression |
| 20 | Imipramine+mianserin vs desipramine+mianserin | DB | <3 m | 6 w | HDRS | Imipramine + mianserin more effective than desipramine + mianserin in reduction of depression | |
| 56 | nortryptiline vs fluoxetine vs placebo | DB | 4–16 w | 12 w | HDRS | nortriptyline produced a significantly higher response rate than fluoxetine or placebo | |
| 31 | fluoxetine vs placebo | DB | <3 m | 6 w | MADRS | fluoxetine more effective than placebo in reduction of depression | |
| 54 | fluoxetine vs placebo | DB | <2 w | 3 m | HDRS, BDI | fluoxetine more effective than placebo at 18-month follow-up evaluation | |
| 74 | citalopram vs reboxetina | DB | <12 m | 16 w | HDRS, BDI | citalopram better in anxious depressed patients, reboxetine more effective in retarded depressed patients | |
| 123 | sertraline vs placebo | DB | 3 d – 1y | 26 w | MADRS, EDS | sertraline superior only in emotional distress, emotionalism and QoL | |
| 152 | fluoxetine vs placebo | DB | 14 m | 3 m | BDI, clinical, STAS | fluoxetine more efficacious only in the treatment of emotional incontinence and anger proneness. |
Abbreviations: w, weeks; m, months; y, years; DB, double-blind; BDI, Beck Depression Inventory; HDRS, Hamilton Depression Rating Scale; MADRS, Montgomery Asberg Depression Rating Scale; QoL, Quality of Life; STAS, Spielberger Trait Anger Scale.