Browsing by Author "Uyanik, Handan Uzuncakmak"
Now showing 1 - 1 of 1
- Results Per Page
- Sort Options
Article Citation Count: 7Prospective investigation of cerebellar cognitive affective syndrome in a previously non-demented population of acute cerebellar stroke(Elsevier, 2020) Taskiran-Sag, Aslihan; Uyanik, Handan Uzuncakmak; Uyanik, Sadik Ahmet; Oztekin, NeseObjective: In this prospective study, we aimed to investigate the presence and evolu-tion of cerebellar cognitive affective syndrome in a cohort of isolated cerebellar stroke with no known cognitive or psychiatric impairment. We tried to distinguish the unconfounded effect of cerebellar lesions on neuropsychological processing. Methods: After a meticulous exclusion procedure based on possible confounders, we recruited 14 patients and 13 age-matched healthy controls to the study, prospec-tively. All of the patients had a detailed initial neuropsychological assessment at the first week and a follow-up assessment at the 4th month after stroke. Results: The prevalence of cognitive or behavioral-affective abnormalities in our cohort were 86% and 64% respectively. The patients exhibited mild and transient affective-behavioral abnormalities except for depressive symptoms that persisted in the sub-acute stage. They scored lower in general cognitive performance as revealed by mini mental test (p=0.001). Memory, executive functions, attention and working memory, central processing speed, and linguistic abilities were impaired (p<0.001; p=0.001; p=0.007; p=0.05; p<0.001 respectively). Improvement was evident only in memory domain of the cognitive functions in the subacute stage. Cognitive impairment was more likely with a medial or posterolateral infarct (p=0.014). Behavioral-affective abnormalities were not associated with a specific location in our cohort. Age seemed to negatively correlate with the recovery in general cogni-tive performance on the follow-up. Conclusions: These findings show that acute denervation of cerebellocortical projections leads to mild affective-behavioral abnormalities, and full-blown cerebellar cognitive affective syndrome is rare. How-ever, cognition was significantly affected after an acute cerebellar infarct even in a previously healthy, non-demented pure population.