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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