Publication: Intensive Communicative Therapy Reduces Symptoms of Depression in Chronic Nonfluent Aphasia.
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Identifiers
Date
2017-12-01
Authors
Mohr, Bettina
Stahl, Benjamin
Berthier, Marcelo L
Pulvermüller, Friedemann
Advisors
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Sage
Abstract
Patients with brain lesions and resultant chronic aphasia frequently suffer from depression. However, no effective interventions are available to target neuropsychiatric symptoms in patients with aphasia who have severe language and communication deficits. The present study aimed to investigate the efficacy of 2 different methods of speech and language therapy in reducing symptoms of depression in aphasia on the Beck Depression Inventory (BDI) using secondary analysis (BILAT-1 trial). In a crossover randomized controlled trial, 18 participants with chronic nonfluent aphasia following left-hemispheric brain lesions were assigned to 2 consecutive treatments: (1) intensive language-action therapy (ILAT), emphasizing communicative language use in social interaction, and (2) intensive naming therapy (INT), an utterance-centered standard method. Patients were randomly assigned to 2 groups, receiving both treatments in counterbalanced order. Both interventions were applied for 3.5 hours daily over a period of 6 consecutive working days. Outcome measures included depression scores on the BDI and a clinical language test (Aachen Aphasia Test). Patients showed a significant decrease in symptoms of depression after ILAT but not after INT, which paralleled changes on clinical language tests. Treatment-induced decreases in depression scores persisted when controlling for individual changes in language performance. Intensive training of behaviorally relevant verbal communication in social interaction might help reduce symptoms of depression in patients with chronic nonfluent aphasia.
Description
MeSH Terms
Adult
Aged
Aphasia, broca
Brain biseases
Chronic disease
Cross-over studies
Depression
Female
Humans
Language therapy
Male
Middle aged
Neurological rehabilitation
Speech therapy
Treatment outcome
Aged
Aphasia, broca
Brain biseases
Chronic disease
Cross-over studies
Depression
Female
Humans
Language therapy
Male
Middle aged
Neurological rehabilitation
Speech therapy
Treatment outcome
DeCS Terms
Depresión
Encefalopatías
Enfermedad crónica
Logopedia
Terapia del lenguaje
Encefalopatías
Enfermedad crónica
Logopedia
Terapia del lenguaje
CIE Terms
Keywords
aphasia, communication, depression, language therapy, neurological rehabilitation
Citation
Mohr B, Stahl B, Berthier ML, Pulvermüller F. Intensive Communicative Therapy Reduces Symptoms of Depression in Chronic Nonfluent Aphasia. Neurorehabil Neural Repair. 2017 Dec;31(12):1053-1062