| Literature DB >> 31551700 |
Soumia Benbrika1, Béatrice Desgranges1, Francis Eustache1, Fausto Viader1.
Abstract
It is now well recognized that, in addition to motor impairment, amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) may cause extra-motor clinical signs and symptoms. These can include the alteration of certain cognitive functions, impaired social cognition, and changes in the perception and processing of emotions. Where these extra-motor manifestations occur in ALS, they usually do so from disease onset. In about 10% of cases, the cognitive and behavioral changes meet the diagnostic criteria for frontotemporal dementia. The timecourse of behavioral and cognitive involvement in ALS is unclear. Whereas longitudinal studies have failed to show cognitive decline over time, some cross-sectional studies have demonstrated poorer cognitive performances in the advanced stages of the disease. Neuroimaging studies show that in ALS, extra-motor signs and symptoms are associated with specific brain lesions, but little is known about how they change over time. Finally, patients with ALS appear less depressed than might be expected, given the prognosis. Moreover, many patients achieve satisfactory psychosocial adjustment throughout the course of the disease, regardless of their degree of motor disability. There are scant longitudinal data on extra-motor impairment in ALS, and to our knowledge, no systematic review on this subject has yet been published. Even so, a better understanding of patients' clinical trajectory is essential if they are to be provided with tailored care and given the best possible support. We therefore undertook to review the evidence for extra-motor changes and their time course in ALS, in both the cognitive, emotional and psychological domains, with a view to identifying mechanisms that may help these patients cope with their disease.Entities:
Keywords: amyotrophic lateral sclerosis; cognition; coping; emotion; extra-motor manifestations; psychological adjustment
Year: 2019 PMID: 31551700 PMCID: PMC6746914 DOI: 10.3389/fnins.2019.00951
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Neurosci ISSN: 1662-453X Impact factor: 4.677
Cognition in ALS.
| 58 pts / 29 NC | CS | Neuropsychological assessment Brain MRI | Global cognitive dysfunction on executive and verbal memory tests. Smaller right hippocampal volume in pts; left hippocampal volume correlates with verbal episodic memory | |
| 2 pts / 25 NC | CS | Verbal fluency Working memory | Verbal fluency impairments result from deficits in the central executive component of working memory | |
| 20 pts / 18 NC | LS : BL, 6 mo | Executive, memory, language, visuospatial functions, behavior, and emotion | Verbal fluency remains stable whereas other language abilities decreased overtime | |
| 49 pts | LS : BL, 7 mo | cognitive-behavioral assessment: ALS-CBS | No cognitive change whereas patients develop bi overtime | |
| 100 pts / 50 NC | LS : BL, 3 mo | Behavioral and cognitive evaluation Genetic testing | No changes over time. | |
| 33 pts / 33 CG | CS | CG burden. Cognitive-behavioral profile of pts | Ci and bi (apathy and disinhibition) predict high level of CG burden | |
| 24 pts : 21 : NC | LS : BL, 6 mo, 12-18 mo | Cognitive assessment with the ECAS and FAB | No significant alteration overtime in cognition and behavior | |
| 191 pts | CS | Clinical, cognitive, behavioral, and survival data 3T high resolution MRI Screening for | Mutated ALS-pts have lower age of disease onset, more often family history of FTD, more comorbid FTD, distinct pattern of non-motor cortex changes on MRI and shorter survival | |
| 168 pts | CS | FAB, MoCA, ECAS BDI, STAI | Depression correlates negatively with ECAS and specially with executive functions | |
| 23 pts / 39 NC | CS | Standard neuropsychological battery FBI | 30%: executive ci, naming and short-term memory deficits; 20%: disorganization and mental rigidity 13%: comorbid dementia. | |
| 26 pts / 26 NC | CS | Global cognition, memory, language, executive functions, MADRS | Global but subtle cognitive impairment of all neuropsychological tests with no specific profile | |
| 139 pts | CS | Executive function, memory, language, visuospatial function | Executive dysfunction and comorbid FTD associated to shorter survival | |
| 186: BL / 96: 2 assessments / 46: 3 assessments | LS : | Cognitive assessment | Cognitive function declines faster in patients cognitively impaired at BL. | |
| 161 pts | CS | Cognitive-behavioral profile × site of onset and gender relative to emerging FTD | Bulbar pts : worse letter fluency; Bulbar females : worse category fluency; females with low oestrogen levels: worse letter fluency | |
| 20 pts / 36 NC | CS | ALS-CFB | Executive dysfunction | |
| 131 pts | Cross-sectional | Spectrum and clinical associations of ci impairment in ALS Effect of ci on survival | 40% ci, 10%FTD Impaired patients: less education, more likely to have bulbar onset. Severe cognitive impairment predicts shorter survival | |
| 110 pts | CS | Behavioral and cognitive evaluation | Frontal syndrome correlates negatively to survival | |
| 15 pts | CS | Semantic memory | 60% of pts have semantic memory impairment | |
| 37 pts / 33 NC | CS | ALS-BCA and other neuropsychological tests | Shorter survival associated to dementia and behavioral impairment | |
| 22 pts / 18 NNMC / 17 NC | CS | MMSE; immediate and delayed memory tests | Pts perform lower than NNMC and NC at MMSE and memory tasks. MMSE and memory correlates negatively to upper limb function | |
| 20 ALS pts / 15 ALS-FTD / 27 PNFA / 23 NC | CS | Syntax comprehension : Test for Reception of Grammar Brain volume by MRI-VBM | Syntactic comprehension impaired in 25% of ALS, 92.9% of FTD-ALS, and 81.5% of PNFA Impairment correlates with left peri-insular atrophy | |
| 98 pts / 70 NC | CS | Executive cognitive, Executive behavior | 70% of ci pts have executive dysfunction (initiation and shifting). Dominant bi is apathy | |
| 93 pts : 73 NC | LS : BL and at three time every 3-6 mo | Executive functioning | No significant decline | |
| 17 pts / 19 ALS-FTD, 22 SD / 26 NC | CS | Assessment of semantic deficits Brain volume by MRI-VBM | Significant semantic deficits in ALS and ALS-FTD compared to controls. Severity of semantic deficits varies across clinical phenotypes. Anterior temporal lobe atrophy correlates with semantic deficits | |
| 18 pts : 19 NC | LS : BL, 6 and 12 mo | Cognitive function | Executive alteration at baseline does not worsen at follow-up | |
| 31 pts and 29 NC | CS | Brain MRI | Reduction of left and right hippocampal volumes in patients’ | |
| 207 pts / 127 NC | CS | Comprehensive neuropsychological assessment | 49.7% cognitively normal, 12.6% ALS with FTD, 19.7% ALS-executive ci, 5.5% ALS-non executive ci, 16% ALS-bi and 6% non-classifiable ci. ALS-FTD older, lower educational level and shorter survival | |
| 23 pts | CS | Neuropsychological, neurobehavioral assessment | No impairment: 11 pts; behavioral changes: 4; FTD: 5;other :3 (Alzheimer : 1) | |
| 274 pts | CS | Neuropsychological and neurobehavioral assessment : ALS-CBS | 54.2% ci, 14.1% bi and 6.5% FTD | |
| 260 pts / 134 NC | CS | Executive function, memory and language. | 29% pts have executive ci and 18% non-executive ci; Females have 2-fold risk to have executive ci | |
| 81 pts | CS | Survival predictors | Younger age, limb onset and absence of comorbid FTD predicted higher survival | |
| 160 pts / 110 NC | CS | Comprehensive neuropsychological battery | 46% no ci; 14% FTD; 21% executive ci; 14% non-executive ci | |
| 164 BL / 48 at 6 mo / 18 at 12 mo / 5 at 18 mo | LS : BL, 6 mo, 12 mo, 24 mo | Cognitive and behavioral examination : ECAS | No behavioral or cognitive worsening | |
| 26 pts / 21 NC | CS | Neuropsychological assessment Brain MRI | Prose memory impairment correlates to hippocampal volume | |
| 247 pts | CS | Cognition-behavior : CBS Psychological : PHQ | 40 % ci, 9% bi, 18% ci and bi, 12 % Major or minor depression; 12% Bi associated with depression | |
| 279 pts / 129 NC | CS | Neuropsychological testing | 49% intact; 32% mild ci, 13% moderate ci, 6% severe ci, 15% FTD | |
| 16 pts / 12 NC | LS : BL, 6-12-18-24 mo | Language testing with standardized tests and analysis of productivity and content | No alteration at standardized tests. Impairment of discourse content. Alteration of performances overtime | |
| 19 pts / 8 CG | LS : BL, 6 mo | Neuropsychological assessment | No change overtime even if some patients develop abnormalities | |
| 52 pts | LS : BL and each 4 months until 18 mo | Executive functions, memory and attentional control. | No decline on follow-up | |
| 58 pts | LS : BL and yearly | Executive function and correlation to survival | 49.5 % executive ci and BL executive status might predict survival | |
| 13 pts | CS | Neuropsychological, language and speech testing | Mild impairment in several domains especially when bulbar onset | |
| 44 pts | CS | Comprehensive pulmonary (vital capacity) and neuropsychological assessments | More respiratory-impairment when clinically significant impairments in frontal-lobe-mediated behaviors. Greater executive functioning deficits in patients with bulbar versus limb onset | |
| 108 pts / 60 NMC | CS | ACE-III, FAB, ECAS, ALS-FTD-Q, MiND-B | 14 to 30% ci on ALS and 3.3 to 11.7 % on NMC. 32 % bi on ALS and 39 % on NMC. Ci and bi influence prognosis | |
| 91 pts | CS | Neuropsychiatric symptoms and cognition: NPI, ACE-R, FAB | Depression 59%, anxiety 41%, lability 26%. NPI correlates with ACE-R but not with FAB | |
| 294 BL / 134 at follow up | LS : BL, 5-18 mo | Cognitive and behavioral changes | Worsening of behavior but not cognition | |
| 48 pts / 47 NC | CS | Executive function: TMT, SNST, WAIS, WCST | Pts worse than NC on TMT, SNST and WAIS Similarities. No difference between bulbar and spinal onset pts |
Social cognition and emotion perception in ALS.
| 33 pts / 22 NC | CS | Emotion processing multimodal tasks (facial affect and voice prosody) Executive, mood and functional tests | Difficulties in recognizing emotions both in faces and voices | |
| 28 pts / 30 NC | CS | 20-item Toronto Alexithymia Scale Correlation / gray matter volume | Pts > NC. Alexithymia correlated with prefrontal cortex, right temporal pole and parahippocampal gyri | |
| 106 pts/50 NC | CS | RME and executive function in bulbar vs. spinal-onset ALS | Bulbar onset pts have more social cognition but not more executive impairment than spinal onset pts. | |
| 23 pts / 23 NC | CS | An original false-belief task and executive tasks 18F-FDG PET-scan examination | ToM impairment only partially linked to executive dysfunction. Correlated with metabolism of dorso-medial and dorsolateral prefrontal cortices, and SMA | |
| 15 pts / 21 NC | CS | Social cognition (private vs. social intentions) | Impaired comprehension of social context | |
| 16 pts / 16 NC | CS | ToM and executive function | Abnormalities of social cognition linked to executive function | |
| 20 pts / 36 NC at baseline 11 pts / 20 NC after 9 months | LS | ALS- Computerised Frontal Battery | Impairment in social cognition, initiation of behavior, executive processing and response suppression. Decline in executive processing over time | |
| 19 pts/20 NC | CS | Behavior (FSBS) Social cognition (modified IGT) Gaze, RME, emotion recognition | Increased apathy. Different profile from NC. Impaired emotion recognition | |
| 12 pts / 18 NC | CS | Judgment of pictures from the IAPS | Pts more positive than NC | |
| 18 pts / 18 NC | CS | Orbitomedial prefrontal tasks (Faux Pas, emotional prosody recognition, reversal of behavior in response to changes in reward, decision making and Neuropsychiatric Inventory Dorsolateral prefrontal tasks (verbal and written fluency and planning) | Dissociations involving either one or two or both of the orbito-frontal or dorsolateral prefrontal regions. Variability and heterogeneity of cognitive involvement in ALS | |
| 24 pts / 24 NC | CS | K-MMSE,BDI, FAB Perception of emotional expression | Pts < NC | |
| 9 pts / 10 NC | CS | Two fMRI emotional attribution and memory tasks | Activation increased in the left hemisphere and reduced in the right one in both tasks | |
| 19 pts / 20 NC | CS | Facial expression recognition, Social judgement rating of faces, Memory for emotional words. | No enhanced recognition memory for emotional vs. neutral words | |
| 14 pts / 9 NC | 20-item Toronto Alexithymia Scale | Pts > NC | ||
| 22 pts / 15 NC | CS | ToM: Emotion Attribution Task, Advanced Test of ToM, Eyes Task Executive, verbal comprehension, visuospatial tasks, behavior, and QoL | Impairment of both affective and cognitive ToM that impacts the “Mental Health” component of QoL | |
| 21 pts / 15 NC at baseline and after 6 months | LS | Affective and cognitive ToM and global neuropsychological assessment, Resting state MRI study | No impairment at baseline. At 6 months, impairment of both affective and cognitive ToM in bulbar onset pts, and of the cognitive subcomponent alone in spinal onset pts. Various changes in RSN connectivity. | |
| 33 pts / 26 NC | CS | Social cognition (Cognitive–Affective Judgement of Preference Test), Measures of empathy and awareness | Affective and ToM deficit, poor empathy and self-awareness of their difficulties | |
| 55 pts / 49 NC | CS | Social cognition, executive functions, mood, behavior and personality | Social cognition impairment mainly predicted by executive dysfunction | |
| 13 bulbar pts / 12 NC | CS | Facial emotional and prosodic recognition task | Pts < NC |
Behavioral changes in ALS.
| 40 pts / 40CG and 27 NC & relatives | CS | Behavioral changes: CBI-R CG burden | Pts: disturbance on everyday skills, self-care, and sleep, mood and motivation. CG burden: pts’ skills, motivation and memory | |
| 86 pts | CS | Cognitive-Behavioral Screen Patient QoL CG burden Disease stage | Cognitive impairment: 62%; Behavioral impairment: 37%; FTD: 5% Severity of deficits not associated with patient QoL; predicts higher CG burden. Self-reported QoL lower in pts with depressive symptoms and more advanced disease | |
| 49 pts BL & 7 mo | LS | Assessment of cognitive-behavioral function using the ALS-CBS | Cognitive status: no change over time; Pts initially classified as behaviorally normal show increased behavioral problems over time | |
| 317 pts / 66 NC | CS | Behavioral changes: BBI Cognitive assessment, Impact on survival | Behavioral changes: none, 57%; mild to moderate: 30%; severe (FTD) : 13% Behavioral changes predicted by social cognitive performances. No impact on survival | |
| 60 pts | Cs | Impact of apathy (AES) on QoL (PWI) | Apathy: 30 %. Pts with apathy have poorer overall QoL | |
| 23 pts, 11 Lower MND, 39 NC | CS | Cognitive and behavioral assessment | Executive dysfunction: 30% of ALS pts disorganization and mental rigidity: 20% Dementia:13%. No correlation between cognitive and behavioral changes and clinical features | |
| 161 pts, 80 NC | CS | Pts: ECAS; Disease stage : the King’s Clinical Staging System CG behavioral interview | Behavioral impairment : 40% (firstly apathy). Higher number of behavioral features found across advancing stages. | |
| 22 pts / 19 NC | CS | Apathy: AES, FrSBe, Global cognitive assessment, Brain imaging: DTI | No behavioral and cognitive impairment. Apathy inversely correlated to fractional anisotropy (FA) in several WM areas | |
| 34 pts at BL, 6, 12, 18 mo | LS | Cognitive and behavioral manifestation in carriers of the mutation | Symptomatic carriers decline at each evaluation on cognitive and behavioral functioning | |
| 16 pts | CS | The Manchester FTD Behavioral Interview of informants | Behavioral changes: 87%; FTD:8% Behavioral changes associated to bulbar palsy, but not to disease duration | |
| 98 pts / 70 NC | CS | Executive cognitive, Executive behavior | 70% of ci pts have executive dysfunction (initiation and shifting). Dominant bi is apathy | |
| 45 pts | CS | FrSBe, Verbal fluency and DKEFS BDI | Changes in apathy scores. Apathy correlates with verbal fluency but not with depressive symptoms | |
| 92 pts | CS | Self-report measures of motor function and mood CBI-R in 81 pts | Reduced motivation: 80 % (apathy in 41 %). Stereotypical and abnormal motor behaviors: 20 %; FTD: 11 % | |
| 140 CG | CS | CG burden: Zarit Burden Interview CG mood: DASS, Pts behavioral changes: CBI-R | Behavioral changes in 10-40% of pts; Depression, anxiety in 20% of CG; high burden in 48% of CG; Strongest predictor of high CG burden = pts’ abnormal behavior | |
| 10 pts with tracheostomy and their CG | CS | Anxiety and depression with the HADS Personality of CG using the Big Five Questionnaire (BFQ) | A trend of aggression and high level of obsessiveness in ALS pts. High levels of anxiety in both pts and CG. Higher scores in the dimension of conscientiousness in CG | |
| 219 pts 20 pts at 6m | Co LS | MiND-B ALS-FRS | Neuropsychiatric symptoms appear before classic motor features. Not associated with survival. No significant change at 6 mo | |
| 23 pts | CS | Neuropsychological and neurobehavioral assessment : ALS-CBS | No impairment: 11 pts; behavioral changes: 4; FTD: 5;other :3 (Alzheimer : 1) | |
| 57 ALS, 5 ALS-FTD, 12 FTD, 35 NC | CS | Cognitive, behavioral, affective and activities of daily living assessment | FAB and MoCA useful to assess frontal cognitive impairments. ALS-FTD-Q useful to detect mild behavioral and affective disturbances. | |
| 168 pts at BL 48 after 6 mo 18 after 12 mo 5 after 24 mo | LS | ECAS, FAB and MoCA BDI and STAI/Y | No cognitive deterioration across follow-ups. improvement of some ECAS scores over time due to possible practice effects. Apathy/Inertia = most common behavioral symptom, but no worsening over time. | |
| 247 pts | CS | Cognition-behavior : CBS Psychological : PHQ | 40 % ci, 9% bi, 18% ci and bi, 12 % Major or minor depression; 12% Bi associated with depression | |
| 30 ALS pts / 29 NC | CS | Apathy subtypes with the self- and informant/carer-rated DAS, Cognition: ECAS Comprehensive neuropsychological battery | Increased Initiation apathy was the only significantly elevated subtype in ALS. Initiation apathy associated with verbal fluency deficit, and Emotional apathy, with emotional recognition deficits | |
| 24 pts | CS | Behavioral changes: the FrSBe, ALSFRS respiratory function, arterial blood gases | No correlation between FrSBe scores and ALSFRS, respiratory function, or arterial blood gases. Most frequent behavioral change: apathy | |
| 84 pts & CG | CS | Pts: ALSCBS-ci and –bi, FAB and BDI CG: BDI and CGBI. | CG burden correlates with pts behavioral but not cognitive changes. CG Burden correlates to CG depression | |
| 152 pts | CS | EPN-31 (emotional feeling); HADS, The Marin’s apathy evaluation scale Cognitive assessment: ALS-CBS scale. | Apathy: 42 %; related to negative emotions and negatively correlated to cognitive functioning and survival | |
| 225 pts | CS | FrSBe, Comprehensive neuropsychological evaluation | Changes in the total score: 24.4% (firstly apathy). Cognitively impaired pts have worse total and apathy scores. Behavioral changes in 16 % of cognitively intact pts | |
| 17 ALS 4 ALS-FTD | CS | Behavioral changes: FrSBe Pts’ awareness of their behavioral changes | Not demented ALS pts have normal insight compared to FTD-ALS pts who have behavioral changes and no insight | |
| 24 pts; 24 NC | CS | Apathy Brain imaging: DTI | Apathy correlated to FA in right anterior cingulum; not correlated with disease duration or respiratory dysfunction | |
| 294 at BL 134 at 12 mo | LS | ALS-CBS, Verbal Fluency Index, Controlled Oral Word Association Test and FBI-ALS | No cognitive decline over time; Behavioral change, with increased disinhibition among patients with abnormal BL behavioral scores; BL behavioral problems associated with advanced, rapidly progressive disease |
Psychosocial adjustment and coping in ALS.
| 53 pts | CS | Prevalence of wish to die and its determinants | 18.9% express the wish to die. More likely to have depression, less optimism, less comfort in religion, and greater hopelessness. 5.7% having hastened dying reported reduction in suffering in the final weeks of life | |
| 127 pts | CS | Depression: ADI-12 | 29% moderate or severe depression, not correlated to disease duration | |
| 10 pts/controls with chronic diseases | CS | IECS MAACL MMPI | Active masterful behavior. Exclusion of dysphoric affect from awareness. Independence and competent behavior | |
| 27 pts | CS | DSM-IV, Covi anxiety scale, MADRS, Depressive Mood Scale | No severe depression or anxiety. Emotional reactions in the first 6 months after diagnostic disclosure | |
| 27 pts | CS | DASS-21 | Lengthy diagnostic interval / higher depressive symptoms | |
| 93 pts and CG | CS | Depression and anxiety: Hamilton depression and anxiety scales | Depression and anxiety rates in pts correlate with CG but not with disease duration or physical incapacity | |
| 60 pts / 60 CG | CS | CG burden: CBI QoL: MQoL Depression: ZDS Perceived Burden: SPBS | Depression: 18% pts,7% CG CG burden // CG’s mood and pt’s physical disability. Depression of CG/pt correlate | |
| 100 pts / 100 NC | Cognition: MMSE Anxiety: SAS Depression: SDS Functional state: ALSFRS | MMSE negatively correlated with disease duration and ALS-FRS. Higher depression and anxiety in pts than in NC | ||
| 73 pts / general population | Prospective cohort study BL, 6 & 12 mo | Measure of QoL: SF-36 Functional disability: ALS-FRS | QoL lower than controls (Physical Functioning, Role Physical, Social Functioning) but stable over time | |
| 6642 pts | Population-based cohort study | Suicide rate in ALS pts / general population | Suicide risk 6 x in ALS pts. Higher in younger pts and 1st year after 1st hospital stay | |
| 37 | CS | Depression: SCID-IV, BDI, HADS, ADI-12 and CES-D | 21-25% major depression with SCID, CES-D and BDI | |
| 100 pts / CG | Prospective cohort | Determination of pts and caregivers’ attitude toward assisted suicide | 56% would consider suicide. Men, higher education, less religiosity, higher scores for hopelessness, lower QoL increase positive attitude towards assisted suicide 73%: pts and caregivers have the same point of view | |
| 31 pts / 31 CG | LS: BL – 9 mo | Depression: ZDS QoL: (MQoL) Caregivers’ burden: CBI Perceived burden: SPBS | Depression and QoL stable over time in pts but Depression and burden increase in CG | |
| 50 CG at BL, 21 on follow-up | LS BL-follow-up 6 mo intervals | Mood, burden and strain, Social support and marital relationship | Main predictor of distress in ALS pts CG over time is poor social support | |
| 50 at BL 26 over time | LS: BL, 6 and 11 mo | Predictors of psychological distress | Affective state and self-esteem predicted by social support and pre-illness marital intimacy | |
| 19 pts / 19 CG | CS | Psychological distress in pts and CG and their determinants | In pts: anxiety and depression correlate to physical disability In CG: distress depends on pts’ funct. impairment, and intimacy loss. Perceived good social support correlates to future ability to cope | |
| 41 pts / 41 relatives | CS | Depression with ADL-12; QoL with MLDL in pts and relatives | Mood and QoL correlate between pts and relatives but not to functional impairment | |
| 39 pts | CS | Assessment of depression by DSMIV, BDI and ADI-12 scales | 10 % depressed by SCID ADI-12 recommended for screening depression in ALS | |
| 41 pts | CS | Depressive symptoms Correlation to the ALS-FRS, disease duration, age and sex | Depression correlated with swallowing and breathing but not with age, sex or ALS-FRS; depression correlated with duration | |
| 36 pts | LS: BL and at 5 time over a period of 2 years | Coping strategies: with Motor Neuron Disease Coping Scale Well-being: Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale Physical abilities | No changes over time in coping strategies; Psychological state correlates with some coping items (e.g. negative correlation with depressive symptoms and “positive action, positive thinking and independence”) | |
| 36 pts | Longitudinal with a follow up periode of 2 years | QoL: SEIQoL-DW; Emotional distress: HADS | Anxiety 11%, depression 5% early on after diagnosis Anxiety decreases over time QoL related to depression soon after diagnosis | |
| 22 pts / 17 NC | CS | Neuropsychological assessement Depression: GDS, BDI | Cognitive tests: Pts < NC. No influence of depression. Depression correlated with limb function | |
| 40 pts | CS | Patient’s control: IECS; Depression: BDI, MAACL Denial | Depression 22%. Dysphoria frequently found. No specific use of denial or internal locus of control | |
| 140 CG | CS | CG burden: Zarit Burden Interview CG mood: DASS-21 Pts; behavior: CBI-R | Behavioral changes in 10–40% of pts; Depression, anxiety in 20% of CG; high burden in 48% of CG; Strongest predictor of high CG burden = pts’ abnormal behavior | |
| 25 ALS / 22 NC | CS | Fatigue and depression: MQoL CES-D | Fatigue and depression higher in pts/NC Associated with poorer QoL | |
| 1: 39 pts 2: 30 pts / 30 NC | CS: pts / NC LS: BL and 80 - 100 days later | Depression with ADI-12; QoL with SEIQoL-DW | Depression 28% not correlated to physical impairment QoL = NC and not correlated to physical impairment | |
| 30 ALS pts 29 cancer pts 29 NC | CS | Depression: BDI; QoL: SEIQoL-DW Coping strategy: Jerusalem Coping scale | Good psychosocial adjustment and subjective QoL in both patient groups | |
| 27 pts | CS | Depression, QoL Predictors: social support, cognitive appraisal, coping strategies | Perceived social support predicts depression and QoL. Appraisal of coping potential predicts depression. No impact of physical status | |
| 27 pts | Longitudinal with four evaluation in 2 years | QoL; Depression Social support, cognitive appraisals, and coping strategies | Social support, cognitive appraisals, coping strategies are the best predictors of QoL and depression | |
| 223 at BL 113 at 3 mo 65 final visit | LS | Fatigue and depression prevalence at BL, 3 and 6 mo y PHQ-9 interview | Fatigue associated to severity and more prevalent and persistent than depression | |
| 81 pts / 81 CG | LS: BL, 3 mo, 6 mo | ALS-FRS, QoL and Goal Assessment Scale (GAS) | QoL, GAS: no consistent correlations with ALSFRS-R change | |
| 74 pts | CS | ALS -FRS Illness representation: common sense model | QoL, mood, and illness representation correlate with functional state and respiratory capacity. | |
| 56 pts, 31 CG | LS BL / 3-8 mo | Pts: DSM-IV, BDI, STAI, QoL, outlook about future and ZARIT caregiver burden | Pts: major depression 2% by DSM-IV and 28% by BDI. Psychological distress not related to illness progression CG: low rate of depression but high perceived burden | |
| 80 pts BL / 61 pts follow-up | LS / monthly for 15 mo | Prevalence of depression over time: PHQ and BDI | 20% depression increasing to 31% before death | |
| 71 pts / 71 CG | LS: BL and monthly for 51 mo | Depressive symptoms, DSM-IV disorders, Coping strategies Caregiver burden satisfaction with care-giving | CG burden & depression // Reliance on avoidance, perceived burden, fatigue, feeling that pt critical and unappreciative; long-term mechanical ventilation; pts’ plans and supportiveness | |
| 329 pts | CS | Prevalence of depression and wish to die at BL | Depression 12%, related to ALSFRS and motor strength. Wish to die 19% but only 1/3 of which depressed | |
| 247 pts | CS | Cognitive, behavioral or, mood impairment by CBS and PHQ9 | Cognitive impairment:40 %; Behavioral impairment:9%; Both:18%; depression:12 % Behavioral impairment associated to depression | |
| 55 pts / 53 CG | LS | QoL: MQoL | Pt’s Qol: no change over time Total QoL and QoL related to physical symptoms decline in CGs; younger CG = lower QoL | |
| 1752 ALS pts and 8760 NC | R | Depression: ICD-10 and use of antidepressants | Higher risk of depression the year before and the year after the diagnosis of ALS | |
| 60 pts | CS | HRQL/disease severity, fatigue, anxiety, depression, social activities, coping and mechanical ventilation | Severe disease, weak coping capacity, fatigue, mechanical ventilator and anxiety and/or depression associated with worse HRQL | |
| 96 CG | CG | Burden, depression and anxiety Coping strategy: CISS Pts’ cognition/behavior | Burden, anxiety, depression in CG related to: emotion-oriented coping strategy and Pts’ functional dependence | |
| 51 ALS pts 39 other neuromuscular disorders | Depression: BDI, HADS and MDI | Same depression rates in both groups | ||
| 964 | Retrospective cohort | Depression: PHQ-9 and its associated factor | Depression 49 %. High PHQ-9 scores predict mortality. PHQ-9 correlates with QoL. Depression correlated with pseudobulbar symptoms and advanced disease | |
| National psychiatric database / reference cohort | R | Evaluation of the risk to develop ALS in psychiatric pts | Psychiatric disease, especially bipolar disorder and schizophrenia = higher risk to develop ALS, mainly the year after psychiatric illness onset | |
| 71 pts | Prospective, observational cohort study | Depression: BDI Columbia Suicide severity rating scale Reasons for Living inventory for adults. | 39% express either passive or active suicidal ideation. Depressive symptoms, worse disability and coping beliefs scores more present in pts expressing suicidal ideation | |
| 75 pts / CG | LS | Depression: ZDS Anxiety: STAI | High anxiety in pts and CG during the diagnostic phase QoL decreases in CG but not in pts at follow-up | |
| 91 pts | CS | Neuropsychiatric symptoms and cognition: NPI, ACE-R, FAB | Depression 59%, anxiety 41%, lability 26%. NPI correlates with ACE-R but not with FAB | |
| 104 | CS | Depression: BDI, HADS Anxiety: STAi | Depression: 54% with BDI, 25% with HADS Anxiety 35% state 8% trait |