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Depression in aphasic patients: Frequency, severity, and clinical-pathological correlations
Authors:Robert G. Robinson  D. Frank Benson
Affiliation:Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine USA;University of California at Los Angeles School of Medicine USA
Abstract:Twenty-five hospitalized nonfluent, fluent, and global aphasic patients who were several months past the onset of their illness were compared for presence and severity of depression based on four psychopathological measures. The nonfluent aphasic patients had both greater frequency and severity of depression than the other two groups. CT scans showed that the global aphasic patients had the largest lesion size (volumetric) and showed a strong correlation between lesion size and degree of depression. In contrast, patients with fluent aphasias showed an inverse correlation between severity of depression and lesion size; among the nonfluent aphasic patients there was no significant correlation. Depression appears to be common in this population of hospitalized aphasic patients with chronic illness and nonfluent patients are the most depressed group within this population. The increased frequency and severity of depression in the nonfluent patients did not appear to be related to their overall physical or cognitive impairment; two possible mechanisms are discussed.
Keywords:Please address correspondence and reprint requests to: Dr. Robert G. Robinson   Department of Psychiatry   Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine   Baltimore   MD 21205.
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