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Editorial Comment
Fitness, depression, and poststroke fatigue: worn out or weary?
- Amy Brodtmann and Ingrid G L van de Port.
- From The Florey Institute for Neuroscience and Mental Health (A.B.), Melbourne Brain Centre, Heidelberg, Australia; and Revant Rehabilitation Centre Breda (I.G.v.d.P.), the Netherlands.
- Neurology. 2013 Oct 29;81(18):1566-7.
AbstractEach year, around 15 million people worldwide have a stroke. Of these, at least 5 million die, a third remain disabled, and the remainder make a good recovery.(1) Yet more than half of all these 10 million survivors will have fatigue, one of the most debilitating, but least studied, poststroke symptoms. Poststroke fatigue (PSF) is a multifaceted phenomenon.(2) It has been correlated with lowered mood, as well as being influenced by other factors, like age, sex, and cognition. Many researchers have demonstrated that the presence of fatigue negatively influences quality of life, return to work, and perhaps mortality.(3,4) However, most studies have been conducted cross-sectionally, in the subacute or chronic phase after stroke.(4-6.)
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