Journal article
Lower cognitive control network connectivity in stroke participants with depressive features
N Egorova, T Cumming, C Shirbin, M Veldsman, E Werden, A Brodtmann
Translational Psychiatry | NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP | Published : 2017
Open access
Abstract
Around one-third of people develop depression following ischaemic stroke, yet the underlying mechanisms are poorly understood. Post-stroke depression has been linked to frontal infarcts, mainly lesions in the left dorsolateral prefrontal cortex (DLPFC). But depression is a network disorder that cannot be fully characterised through lesion-symptom mapping. Researchers of depression in non-stroke populations have successfully tapped into the cognitive control network (CCN) using the bilateral DLPFC as a seed, and found that CCN resting-state connectivity is reduced in even mildly depressed subjects, compared to healthy controls. Hence, we aimed to investigate the association between post-strok..
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Awarded by Sidney Myer Fund and Myer Foundation
Funding Acknowledgements
This work was supported by the National Health and Medical Research Council project grant number APP1020526, the Brain Foundation, Wicking Trust, Collie Trust, and Sidney and Fiona Myer Family Foundation.